Connect with us

Published

on

Vietnamese migrants with no right to be in the UK will be returned to their home country under a new agreement.

The pilot scheme, announced on Wednesday, will use biometric data sharing and streamlined documentation to fast-track Vietnamese migrants out of the UK if they came illegally.

Politics latest: PM refuses to rule out manifesto-breaking tax rises

More Vietnamese people attempted to cross the Channel in small boats in the first quarter of 2024 than any other nationality, according to Home Office figures.

Statistics from April 2024 showed Vietnamese nationals made up 20% of all small boat arrivals – a 10-fold increase compared with the same period the previous year.

Overall in 2024, approximately 3,798 Vietnamese nationals were detected entering the UK illegally – making up 9% of the 43,630 total detected illegal entries for that year.

Immigration minister Mike Tapp told Sky News the government had already deported 35,000 people in its first year in office, including an increase of 14% on foreign national offenders.

More on Migrant Crisis

Asked how many people from Vietnam were in the UK, Mr Tapp said: “There are a significant number.

“I can’t give you the exact figure that comes over from Vietnam, but it goes up and down.

“So sometimes you’ll see that, spiking. And then it depends where the gangs are at with their operations.”

Prime minister hails ‘landmark agreement’

Sir Keir Starmer welcomed the scheme on X, saying: “I’ve just secured a landmark agreement with Vietnam to ramp up the returns process of illegal migrants.

“I mean it when I say: if you come here illegally, you will be swiftly returned.”

It comes as the government continues to struggle with the number of small boat Channel crossings.

Figures released last week showed more migrants have crossed the English Channel in small boats so far this year than in the whole of 2024.

Read more:
Deported migrant sex offender given £500 to leave country
A colossal reputational repair job is needed after Kebatu debacle

Home Office sources confirmed that more than 36,816 people – the total for 2024 – have now crossed the Channel so far in 2025.

Earlier this year, the UK struck a “one in, one out” treaty which means the UK can send people back to France if they have entered the country illegally.

In exchange, the UK will allow asylum seekers to enter through a safe and legal route – as long as they have not previously tried to enter illegally.

Government setback

However, the scheme suffered an early setback after a migrant who was deported back to France under the flagship scheme returned to the UK on a small boat.

The Iranian national was initially detained when he entered the UK on a small boat on 6 August. He was removed under the government’s deal with France on 19 September, and he returned on 18 October.

On Wednesday morning, border security minister Alex Norris said the man was still in the country.

He told Sky News: “He’s come through, he was detected immediately at the front door, he was detained, and he will be removed from this country.”

Asked when the man would be removed, the minister said: “I wouldn’t want to give a specific timeline, but we are removing him as soon as possible.”

Continue Reading

Politics

UK takes ‘massive step forward,’ passing property laws for crypto

Published

on

By

UK takes ‘massive step forward,’ passing property laws for crypto

The UK has passed a bill into law that treats digital assets, such as cryptocurrencies and stablecoins, as property, which advocates say will better protect crypto users.

Lord Speaker John McFall announced in the House of Lords on Tuesday that the Property (Digital Assets etc) Bill was given royal assent, meaning King Charles agreed to make the bill into an Act of Parliament and passed it into law.

Freddie New, policy chief at advocacy group Bitcoin Policy UK, said on X that the bill “becoming law is a massive step forward for Bitcoin in the United Kingdom and for everyone who holds and uses it here.”

Source: Freddie New

Common law in the UK, based on judges’ decisions, has established that digital assets are property, but the bill sought to codify a recommendation made by the Law Commission of England and Wales in 2024 that crypto be categorized as a new form of personal property for clarity.

“UK courts have already treated digital assets as property, but that was all through case-by-case judgments,” said the advocacy group CryptoUK. “Parliament has now written this principle into law.”

“This gives digital assets a much clearer legal footing — especially for things like proving ownership, recovering stolen assets, and handling them in insolvency or estate cases,” it added.

Digital “things” now considered personal property

CryptoUK said that the bill confirms “that digital or electronic ‘things’ can be objects of personal property rights.”

UK law categorizes personal property in two ways: a “thing in possession,” which is tangible property such as a car, and and a “thing in action,” intangible property, like the right to enforce a contract.

The bill clarifies that “a thing that is digital or electronic in nature” isn’t outside the realm of personal property rights just because it is neither a “thing in possession” nor a “thing in action.”

The Law Commission argued in its report in 2024 that digital assets can possess both qualities, and said that their unclear fit into property rights laws could hamstring dispute resolutions in court.

Related: Group of EU banks pushes for a euro-pegged stablecoin by 2027

Change gives “greater clarity” to crypto users

CryptoUK said on X that the law gives “greater clarity and protection for consumers and investors” and gives crypto holders “the same confidence and certainty they expect with other forms of property.”

“Digital assets can be clearly owned, recovered in cases of theft or fraud, and included within insolvency and estate processes,” it added.