Asylum seekers will be denied the right to stay in the UK if they have been convicted of sexual offences, the government has announced.

Any offender sentenced to more than a year in prison, as well as terrorists and war criminals, can currently be refused asylum and deported under the Refugee Convention.

The government wants to widen the scope to include anyone convicted of a crime that places them on the sex offenders register, regardless of the length of their sentence.

Home Secretary Yvette Cooper said this would “ensure these appalling crimes are taken seriously”.

Cooper said ministers would move to classify sex offences as a particularly serious crime – enabling the government to reject the asylum applications of sex offenders.

Cooper also called for stronger rules to stop judges blocking the deportation of migrants on human rights grounds, suggesting there could be a new framework set by Parliament in future, although she did not provide details.

The government is currently reviewing how the right to a family life contained in Article 8 in the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR) is applied in immigration cases, with an update expected in the coming weeks.

Article 8 has been used by some migrants and asylum seekers to successfully appeal deportation.

Asked about the issue on Radio 4’s Today Programme, Cooper said she had concerns about some of the individual cases where the government disagreed with decisions made in the courts.

“Respect for family life is supposed to be balanced against other issues, including against the public interest, including against the ability for a government to set its own policies, for Parliament to set policies, and for respect for border security and control,” she added.

It is not clear how many cases the change could affect, and the Home Office has not said how many sex offenders have been granted asylum.
Under sentencing guidelines, most sexual crimes carry recommended prison terms beyond a year.

But first-time offenders and less serious examples of sexual assaults, exposure, and sexual communication with a child could lead to custodial sentences of under 12 months.

Cooper said the changes would help tackle instances like that of Abdul Ezedi, who was granted asylum despite being a convicted sex offender.

Ezedi killed himself within hours after he was suspected of dousing his ex-girlfriend with a corrosive liquid when he attacked her and her children in south London in January last year.

He was already on the sex offenders register, after pleading guilty to charges of sexual assault and exposure in 2018, when he was granted asylum in 2020 following two failed attempts.

The changes will be introduced through an amendment to the Border Security, Asylum and Immigration Bill, which is currently making its way through Parliament.

The government also plans to set a 24-week deadline for appeals by foreign offenders and housing asylum seekers, aiming to cut the backlog.

The Home Office said that harnessing artificial intelligence (AI) for processing asylum claims could also save up to an hour per case by summarising interview transcripts and accessing country advice.

A range of measures to reform the asylum system are being introduced, including new powers for the Immigration Advice Authority to issue fines of up to £15,000 for anyone involved in advising fraudulent claims or posing as an immigration lawyer who is not registered.

There will also be restrictions on foreign offenders living in the community, including mandatory electronic tags, strict night-time curfews and enforced exclusion zones.

Enver Solomon, chief executive of the Refugee Council, welcomed efforts to resolve asylum cases quickly, but warned the use of AI could backfire if it produced flawed decisions that end up in the courts.

The Law Society of England and Wales also raised concerns that the target for appeal decisions would be “unworkable” in practice, as the justice system is already struggling to cope with the current demand.

Read also: UK Immigration: New policy to block citizenship for refugees who made ‘dangerous journeys’

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