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Free Movement

By Free Movement

Updates and comment on UK immigration law
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Things are looking up for undocumented migrant children

Free MovementMay 27, 2022

00:00
30:58
Immigration roundup: March 2024

Immigration roundup: March 2024

In the March roundup, Sonia and Colin discuss the latest with Albanian cases as uncovered in the Independent Chief Inspector of Borders and Immigration's report on asylum casework. We cover articles looking at recent changes to the Ukraine schemes, as well as a reminder of the existence of Hamid cases and how to avoid being on the receiving end of a telling off from the High Court. We also recap the recent telling off that Swift J gave the government legal department, changes to work routes, costs in SIAC reviews, GPS tagging, deportation of stateless people and much more!

The 32 minute podcast follows the running order below:

Asylum (00:32)

Asylum casework inspection report reveals mishandling of cases, secret ministerial directions


How to effectively represent Albanian people seeking asylum in an increasingly difficult environment


How the changes to the Ukraine Schemes will make it more difficult for Ukrainians to come to the UK – and why they should be cancelled

 

Procedural (08:40)

Two Hamid referrals made in asylum cases where out of hours injunctions were sought

Government Legal Department told by High Court to keep “rather basic point” in mind when advising on redactions


Special Immigration Appeals Commission has the power to award costs in reviews

 

Points based system (12:40)

Statement of changes HC 590: salary thresholds increased, shortage occupation list gone

Changes to work visa routes from 4 April 2024 and what it means for employers

 

Detention (14:30)

Court finds that the Home Office’s imposition of a GPS tag was unlawful for over a year in the first case of its kind

 

Deportation (17:35)

Can a stateless person be subject to deportation proceedings?

 

EU Settlement Scheme (20:00)

Akinsanya latest: guidance on Zambrano carers found to be unlawful, Appendix EU unaffected

 

British Citizenship (22:10)

Roehrig upheld by Court of Appeal: no changes for certain children of EU citizens not entitled to British citizenship


Appellant keeps British nationality after Court of Appeal overturns dishonesty finding

General immigration (24:40) More increases to application fees, including passports and Appendix FM

Apr 15, 202432:06
Immigration roundup: February 2024

Immigration roundup: February 2024

Your February roundup is here as promised. Colin and Sonia discuss Shamima Begum's latest appeal, the pause on some asylum cases, a run of decisions involving poor conduct on the part of either the Tribunals or the Home Office, as well as corporate transactions, the sudden closure of the Ukraine Family scheme and much more.


The 35 minute podcast follows the running order below.


Asylum (00:25)

Number of asylum refusals and homeless refugees skyrocket in latest statistics

How the Nationality and Borders Act has criminalised those seeking safety in the UK

Briefing: Can criminals be denied refugee status?

Home Secretary confirms “pause” on processing asylum claims


Trafficking (07:45)

Deportation order exclusion in discretionary leave policy for victims of modern slavery found unlawful

Risk of re-trafficking must be assessed before disqualification on public order grounds


Procedure (10:55)

Court of Appeal allows Iranian asylum appeal against “difficult to understand” First-tier Tribunal decision

Court of Appeal demolishes First-tier Tribunal in deportation appeal but upholds decision

Rewarding failure: Home Secretary permitted to withdraw decision under appeal following failure to admit excluded evidence

Home Secretary’s “shockingly poor” handling of case did not amount to contempt of court

Judicial review no longer the appropriate remedy to challenge age assessments in Scotland


Points based system (19:45)

Migration Advisory Committee recommends 21 occupations for the new immigration salary list following rapid review

Briefing: the immigration implications of a corporate transaction


British citizenship (21:45)

Court of Appeal rejects Shamima Begum’s appeal against the deprivation of her British citizenship


Family immigration (26:05)

Statement of changes HC 556: Home Office shuts Ukraine Family Scheme without notice (and details of the webinar mentioned are here: https://freemovement.org.uk/product/webinar-immigration-options-for-ukrainian-nationals-and-their-family-members/)

How to apply for entry clearance for victims of transnational marriage abandonment

Changes to the Destitute Domestic Violence Concession


General (31:05)

What you need to know before buying a property in the United Kingdom

What are the UK’s inheritance tax rules?


Updated (32:20)

Applying for British citizenship by naturalisation

How to apply for leave to remain as a victim of domestic violence

What is the Immigration Health Surcharge and how much does it cost?

Mar 07, 202433:56
Immigration roundup: January 2024

Immigration roundup: January 2024

Colin and Sonia have rounded up January 2024. We cover the government's claims to have cleared the 'legacy' asylum backlog and look at the three backlogs that have replaced it. We also discuss the latest in an increasingly long list of cases in which the Home Office has behaved poorly. We also cover everything else from gender based asylum claims, to new rules for business visitors and care homes both losing and keeping their sponsor licences, as well as an interesting case on detention and the Illegal Migration Act.


We conclude with an invite to former Independent Chief Inspector of Borders and Immigration and (hopefully not also former!) Free Movement podcast listener David Neal to join us on a future episode.


Asylum (00:26)

Reduction in asylum backlog achieved mainly through withdrawals and questionnaires

The inadmissibility process and the three new asylum backlogs

High Court reminder in age assessment challenge of the importance of providing papers on time

Briefing: evidence and arguments in asylum claims based on gender-based violence

CJEU: Women who are victims of gender-based violence can qualify for refugee status

The Home Secretary’s unlawful secret policy to withhold leave to remain from victims of modern slavery

Concessions for applicants to the Hong Kong BN(O) route who are on immigration bail or have withdrawn their asylum claim

 

Points based system (11:48)

High Court quashes Home Office decision to revoke another care home’s sponsor licence

Care home operator loses ability to sponsor overseas workers after compliance failures

More flexibility for business visitors from today

Dates confirmed for changes to income thresholds for family and skilled worker visas

Tax residence in the UK: when do people become liable for income and capital gains tax?

Appendix Children: which routes does it apply to and what are the requirements?

 

Detention (18:18)

High Court grants bail to person detained under new Illegal Migration Act powers

High Court quashes Home Office policy of delaying release of vulnerable detainees to get a second medical opinion

 

Family immigration (23:00)

How to avoid the minimum income requirement for partners under Appendix FM

Webinar: Exceptional circumstances in family-based immigration applications

 

EU Settlement Scheme (25:38)

Changes to treatment of some late applications to the EU Settlement Scheme in new guidance

 

Updated (27:45)

Briefing: The duty to safeguard children in need and their families at section 17 of the Children Act 1989

What are the immigration rules for settled returning residents of the United Kingdom?

Feb 22, 202429:14
Immigration roundup: December 2023

Immigration roundup: December 2023

In our December 2023 round up, Colin and Sonia discuss the latest developments with Home Office evictions and withdrawals, as well as the new Rwanda legislation. We also cover the government's five point plan to reduce net migration as well as the latest case law and Tribunal statistics.

Asylum (01:00)

What is in the Safety of Rwanda (Asylum and Immigration) Bill?

“These guarantees already existed”: the UK’s new treaty with Rwanda

Home Secretary must set out plan to eliminate use of hotels for lone refugee children

Refugees can now claim Universal Credit without a biometric residence permit

Asylum withdrawals guidance amended to halve time given to explain non-attendance at interview

 

Family immigration (19:03)

Objective evidence must be considered when deciding “very significant obstacles” to integration

In-country settlement applications for children and the different sole responsibility requirements

What happens when relationships breakdown on the Hong Kong British National (Overseas) route?

 

General immigration (22:34)

Statement of changes HC 246: rules finally amended to provide for victims of transnational marriage abandonment

Supreme Court dismisses appeals in validity and continuous residence case

Government attack on families as minimum income requirement to rise to £38,700

What should UK employers make of the government’s five-point plan to reduce immigration?

 

EU settlement scheme (31:45)

Article 8 not automatically engaged by a refusal under the EU settlement scheme

Home Office unaware of the extent to which ‘mystery’ stamp has been used to grant entry to UK in error

 

Citizenship (34:55)

Deprivation of British citizenship without advance notice is lawful, says Upper Tribunal

 

Procedure (36:55)

Court of Session agrees restricting judicial reviews of the Upper Tribunal is lawful

Outstanding immigration tribunal appeals up 20% to 31,000

Court of Appeal: raising an entirely new issue in a determination for the first time is unfair

 

Detention (40:32)

Home Office criticised by High Court for “five very concerning features” of detention case

Are safeguards from the harm caused by immigration detention working?

 

Updated articles (43:16)

What is the no recourse to public funds condition?

 

Free Movement (44:00)

New OISC Level 2 training course in immigration and asylum law now available to members

Jan 09, 202445:27
Immigration roundup: November 2023

Immigration roundup: November 2023

Our November roundup is here, where Colin and I cover the latest asylum and trafficking statistics, changes to the way late applications to the EUSS are treated, questions the SRA still hasn't answered, a couple of articles on Palestinians as well as quite a lot of case law.


Policy (00:45)

Assessing Braverman’s legacy as Home Secretary: Part Deux

 

Asylum (02:10)

Latest statistics show huge increase in rejections of late EU settlement scheme applications, no evidence that Rwanda has impacted Channel crossings


Briefing: four looming problems in the UK asylum system and how to address them


Permission granted in challenge to rejection of Albanian asylum claim


Returning a refugee to persecution must be a last resort


India and Georgia to be added to the list of ‘safe’ countries


Gaza: what is the UK doing to rescue British citizens and their family members?


Damages claim for asylum delay dismissed by Court of Appeal


Upper Tribunal failed to properly assess whether error of law was material in asylum appeal

 

Immigration (16:10)

Court of Appeal tells Home Office to reconsider “plainly wrong” decision on Turkish business person application


Deception case returned to the Upper Tribunal after material error of law made


Making sense of sole responsibility for child visas in immigration law

 

Deportation (19:10)

Court of Appeal says deportation of mother of British child not “unduly harsh”

 

Nationality (20:45)

Court of Appeal dismisses appeal on interpretation of nationality law

 

Trafficking (21:55)

Latest trafficking figures show benefit of change in Home Office policy


The UK must improve labour market enforcement in order to tackle exploitation of workers


Increasing numbers of sponsored migrant workers are being exploited in the UK

 

EU Settlement Scheme (26:05)

Important changes to the way late EUSS applications are treated


Court of Appeal dismisses government appeal on access to benefits for people with pre settled status

 

Procedure (28:38)

How to become an OISC level 2 adviser


Government should not routinely remove names of civil servants in judicial review disclosure


Guidance in Begum on deprivation decisions is not restricted to national security cases

Solicitors Regulation Authority has questions to answer about their “warning” to immigration solicitors


Late evidence from the Home Office can be admitted in an appeal where the appellant was aware of it

 

Updated article (34:30)

Briefing: Article 1D of the Refugee Convention and Palestinian refugees

Dec 07, 202337:31
Rwanda discussion and immigration roundup: October 2023

Rwanda discussion and immigration roundup: October 2023

Our October immigration round up is here and we have also included discussion of the Supreme Court's decision in the Rwanda litigation. As well as that, Colin and Sonia covered everything from fishing to legal aid shortages via eSports, medico-legal reports, public funds and the shortage occupation list. We're still not entirely sure that either of us are pronouncing "refoulement" properly.

Timestamps are below, the link to the quiz will be included when we post about this episode on Free Movement. Rwanda (00:58)

Supreme Court finds Rwanda is not a safe country to which refugees can be removed Reflections on the Supreme Court's Rwanda judgment


Blog news (10:15)

Free Movement 2023 reader survey results

 

Asylum (12:55)

High Court success in challenge to move of highly vulnerable asylum seeker away from his support network 

Over half the people seeking asylum are now unable to access a legal aid lawyer 

Safe Passage report: the case for safe routes 

What is a medico-legal report? 

Medico-legal reports: how to instruct and common mistakes to avoid  

New asylum processes set up on disputed territory of Diego Garcia

Court of Appeal gives guidance on sentencing for small boats prosecutions

Fairness in safe third country removals: the Court of Appeal’s judgment in Asylum Aid’s case

 

Policy (25:35)

Migration Advisory Committee recommends shortage occupation list is abolished  

 

Immigration (28:54)

The effect of the Nationality and Borders Act 2022 on the fishing industry

Home Office concedes latest challenge to no recourse to public funds policy

Do foreign gamers need a visa to play competitive eSports in the UK?  

TLScontact in unsuccessful challenge to new Home Office contract  

 

Nationality (37:32)

Court of Appeal upholds deprivation of citizenship decision 

 

Updated articles (38:55)

What are the 10 and 20 year rules on long residence? 

Briefing: what is the law on deporting foreign criminals and their human rights? 


Nov 22, 202339:57
Exploitation and the seasonal agricultural workers scheme

Exploitation and the seasonal agricultural workers scheme

This week, The Bureau of Investigative Journalism published an article on the exploitation of people in the seasonal agricultural workers scheme. It is a must read, and you can find it here: https://www.thebureauinvestigates.com/stories/2023-10-22/all-that-is-missing-is-a-whip-home-office-ignored-migrant-worker-abuses-on-farms


In this podcast, Jamila Duncan-Bosu of the Anti-Trafficking and Labour Exploitation Unit discusses how the scheme facilitates exploitation, the barriers to people raising complaints about their treatment, and what the government can and should be doing about it.

Oct 26, 202340:35
Immigration roundup: September 2023

Immigration roundup: September 2023

Our September roundup is here, featuring the latest statement of changes and new parts of the Illegal Migration Act 2023 being brought into force. We also discuss the Brook House inquiry, the Rwanda litigation, new immigration fees and illegal working fines and have an impromptu book club. Timestamps are below, the link to the quiz will be included when we post about this episode on Free Movement.

Policy (00:40)

Home Office accounts show additional £3 billion unbudgeted asylum expenditure

Will the Illegal Migration Act stop the Home Office raid on international aid funds?

Theresa May even now doesn’t understand why the Windrush scandal happened

India Free Trade Agreement: negotiators should prioritise time and cost ahead of more visas

 

Asylum (07:50)

The Rwanda litigation: who is arguing what in the Supreme Court?

LGBT+ people face persecution and are no less deserving of protection

Age assessments: how to challenge a negative decision

Home Office to start non-therapeutic scientific testing on children

First-tier Tribunal finds that UN Agency is unable to provide protection and assistance to a severely disabled Palestinian child

Safe routes for refugees: how does it work in Spain?

Court of Appeal quashes conviction of person trafficked in the UK as a child

 

Detention (21:00)

Illegal Migration Act 2023: expanded detention powers to be brought into force

Brook House: racist, violent and dangerous

 

Immigration (27:50)

Statement of changes HC 1780: restrictions on administrative review and expansion of Youth Mobility Scheme

Home Office redacts over a hundred sections of new report on insider threat to Border Force

New immigration application fees from 4 October 2023

New illegal working fines will not stop Channel crossings but will bankrupt small businesses

 

Updated articles (35:00)

How to apply for a UK spouse or partner visa

Refugee family reunion: a user’s guide

General grounds for refusal: criminal convictions, public good, character, conduct and associations

Immigration rules for visitors to the United Kingdom

What is the difference between refugee status and humanitarian protection?

What is the no recourse to public funds condition?

Oct 16, 202336:40
Immigration roundup: August 2023

Immigration roundup: August 2023

Here is our August roundup, and the first podcast with Sonia both leading and at the editing helm (eek!). This month we cover statistics, illegal working fines, asylum support, homeless refugees, adult dependent relatives and some EUSS updates.


Following feedback from our reader survey, we have included timestamps below. We will also link directly to the quiz when we post on Free Movement about the podcast.


Policy (01:00)

Journalists perform a public service in exposing dodgy lawyers. But…

Twitter, Musk’s X, Threads, social media and Free Movement

Look closer: our summary of the latest Home Office statistics

Tripling maximum illegal working fines for employers to £45k per worker is a terrible idea

 

Asylum (10:14)

Home Office change in practice increases risk of homelessness for recognised refugees

More delays, more refusals, no ‘bad faith’: the latest trafficking statistics

What next for evacuated Sudanese nationals?

Is the Home Office unlawfully treating asylum claims as withdrawn?

High Court demands radical change to Home Office asylum support

‘Systematic and routine’ use of hotels for unaccompanied asylum-seeking children is unlawful

 

Family (26:00)

Getting an adult dependent relative visa is hard but not impossible

 

EU (28:29)

Who qualifies as a “durable partner” under the EU Settlement Scheme?

Post-Brexit spouses aren’t protected by the Withdrawal Agreement, Court of Appeal confirms

 

Work routes (30:00)

What is the immigration skills charge?

How to apply for a religious work visa

 

Immigration (31:30)

No Windrush compensation for man whose ILR lapsed while imprisoned abroad

How do I become an OISC adviser?


Updated articles (35:50)

General grounds for refusal: alleged deception, false information and innocent mistakes

How to apply for a UK Expansion Worker visa

What are the financial requirements for UK spouse and partner visas?

How to make a complaint to the Home Office

Oct 03, 202336:37
Immigration roundup: July 2023

Immigration roundup: July 2023

We are a bit behind the times this month, catching up from the summer. This time Sonia and I cover not one but two statements of changes, the Illegal Migration Act, asylum withdrawals, the massive increase in fees, several legal updates on the rights of EU citizens and a load of cases, including one from the Supreme Court on Palestinian refugees.

Statement of changes

Statement of changes HC 1715: visa regime imposed on Dominica, Honduras, Namibia, Timor-Leste and Vanuatu

Statement of changes HC 1496: asylum, EU Settlement Scheme, and restrictions on students

Asylum

The Illegal Migration Act 2023: what has changed?

Briefing: why and how is the Home Office treating more asylum claims as “withdrawn”?

What safe and legal routes are available for refugees to come to the United Kingdom?

OISC

OISC amends judicial review practice note to prevent advisers conducting litigation

EU

New law confirms British citizenship for children of EU citizens born in UK before 2 October 2000

How does absence from the UK work under the EU settlement scheme?

A glitch or a feature? Systemic problems with digital proof of immigration status

Immigration

Massive increases to immigration fees announced

Briefing: the rules on returning residents with indefinite leave to remain (ILR)

Points Based System

How to apply for a Global Business Mobility: Secondment Worker visa

Cases

Supreme Court finds exclusion of Palestinians from resettlement scheme not unlawful

Asylum seekers don’t need ‘direct evidence’ they’re being covertly monitored

‘Minded to cancel’ process applies to dishonesty allegations at the UK border

Airport detainee wrongly denied a solicitor in immigration interview

Upper Tribunal reminds parties to identify the issues in an appeal

Tribunal must consider Home Office decisions in full even when not explicitly relied on by representative

High Court rejects challenge to EU Settlement Scheme dependency rules for children

Upper Tribunal rules post-Brexit Zambrano appeals can continue

Home Office withdraws objective evidence test for trafficking decisions

Sep 08, 202335:42
Immigration roundup: June 2023

Immigration roundup: June 2023

This month Sonia and I discuss the Rwanda judgment (we're saving that to the end as our good news story), a couple of fairly lengthy immigration and asylum history blog posts I've been working on for  a while, several asylum developments and also our Refugee Week content, some procedural updates, a bunch (carousel?) of cases and a few other things too. There's quite a lot to go over, so we're just highlighting some of it rather than going into much depth.

The podcast follows the running order below.

A short guide to the legal position and history of the Windrush generation

A short history of refugees coming to Britain: from Huguenots to Ukrainians

Last traces of Nationality and Borders Act 2022 erased with abandonment of “differentiated status” for refugees

Data shows Ukrainians in the UK continue to face homelessness crisis

Is Rishi Sunak’s “Stop The Boats” plan really working?

Rwanda impact assessment looks hopelessly optimistic

United Nations Refugee Agency identifies problems in asylum screening processes

Briefing: the state of the UK asylum system   

What is the legal definition of a “refugee”?

Should refugees claim asylum in the first safe country they reach?

Preparing foreign language witness statements

So-called mandatory grounds for refusal will not always be mandatory

Briefing: the Seasonal Worker visa

Reaction economy: the Home Office’s use of social media

Will I need Electronic Travel Authorisation to enter the UK?

Briefing: what is the Common Travel Area and how does it work?

New country guidance on Democratic Republic of the Congo

Scottish inquiry finds immigration detention centre death was avoidable

Supreme Court finds golden visa scheme unlawful

Trafficking victims wrongly denied financial support in lockdown

Court declines to take legal guardianship of refugee children missing from hotels

Court of Appeal finds Rwanda plan unlawful as Rwanda is not a safe third country

Jul 14, 202335:19
Immigration roundup: May 2023

Immigration roundup: May 2023

This month Sonia and I start with the Big Free Movement News (spoiler: Sonia is joining the team as the new Editor) and then cover a bunch of visa news and updates, a load of case law and several policy developments.

If you are a lawyer and would like to prove to your regulator you are keeping yourself up to date, make sure you remember to take our monthly course and quiz.
Jun 05, 202336:51
Immigration roundup: April 2023

Immigration roundup: April 2023

This month we talk more about the Illegal Migration Bill and its potential consequences, the right way to go about tackling the asylum backlog, Colin's suggestion of a new British Citizenship Act, the resumption of hostile environment bank account closures, we run through a load of cases and end by talking about some business immigration issues. 

If you would like to claim CPD points for reading the material and listening to this podcast, sign up here as a Free Movement member. There are well over 100 CPD hours of training materials available to members. You can find all the available courses here.

If you listen to podcasts on your mobile phone, you can subscribe for free on AnchoriTunesSpotifyStitcher or by pointing your podcast player to the podcast feed for Free Movement. Using a mobile device and subscribing has the advantage that each new podcast can be automatically downloaded for listening to on the go.

The podcast follows the running order below.

How does the Illegal Migration Bill breach the Refugee Convention?

Illegal Migration Bill: helping force refugees into illegality and danger

Could ‘safe and legal routes’ stop the boats?

If the Illegal Migration Bill is unworkable, what can the government do instead?

Amendments to the Illegal Migration Bill attack basic legal rights and processes

Two ways to address the asylum backlog and improve access to justice

It is time for a new British Citizenship Act for the post-Brexit era

Home Office resume bank account closures

High Court rejects challenge by Afghan families to hotel move

High Court dismisses challenge to family reunion rules for refugee children

Judicial Review and Courts Act 2022 ouster clause found effective

Court of Appeal re-affirms restrictive parameters of domestic violence provisions in immigration rules

Exceptional circumstances in a spouse or partner visa application under Appendix FM

How to apply for a Senior or Specialist Worker visa

Reporting hybrid working patterns: new sponsor obligations

Visit visa operations are “refreshingly well run”

May 05, 202336:41
Immigration roundup: March 2023

Immigration roundup: March 2023

For this month's roundup podcast, Sonia and I manage to rattle through a huge volume of updates in a mere 36 minutes. We cover a load of cases, some important asylum policy updates and then several developments in immigration law as well. We're sorry it is a little later than usual; the Easter holidays intervened. And I am sorry if you can hear scaffolders poles bouncing off the pavement outside the block of flats opposite my house...

If you are a lawyer and would like to claim CPD points for reading the material and listening to this podcast, sign up here as a Free Movement member. There are well over 100 CPD hours of training materials available to members. You can find all the available courses here.

The 30-minute podcast follows the running order below.

Permission granted on additional grounds in the Rwanda case in the Court of Appeal

Court of Appeal emphasises absence of corroboration is not fatal in asylum cases

Court of Appeal dismisses appeal against criminalising small boat arrivals

Legal challenges against GPS tagging for people on immigration bail

High Court considers how the loss of work may engage article 8

No recourse to public funds policy found unlawful (again)

“High hurdle” for hotel accommodation challenges?

Refusals of naturalisation on good character grounds can only be challenged by irrationality

Amended data protection exemption for migrants declared unlawful

UK spends one third of international aid budget on domestic asylum costs

Are the new asylum questionnaires fit for purpose?

Assisting with the new asylum questionnaires: OISC Level 1 caseworkers and volunteers

Home Office publishes guidance on streamlined asylum processing for children

Home Office’s approach to family reunion applications condemned by immigration inspector

Borders Inspector “frustrated” by lack of action from Home Office

New statement of changes to the Immigration Rules HC1160

Spring budget migration announcements

New ‘Appendix Adult Dependent Relative’ to the immigration rules 

All families matter: An inquiry into family migration 

Government Authorised Exchange: one visa, 40 options 

Apr 21, 202336:32
Podcast special: the Illegal Migration Bill

Podcast special: the Illegal Migration Bill

Colin Yeo and Sonia Lenegan discuss the Illegal Migration Bill. They talk through what is in it, what will it do, how is it intended to work, whether it is compatible with international law and what effects it might have in reality.

Mar 14, 202301:01:01
Immigration roundup: February 2023

Immigration roundup: February 2023

This month Sonia and I talk a bit about denaturalisation generally and the case of Shamima Begum specifically, we cover the new streamlined asylum process and a few other asylum-related blog posts and then we run through a few cases. We manage to keep things a bit shorter than normal, but watch out for our coverage of the Illegal Migration Bill, which will be available separately.

The 30-minute podcast follows the running order below.

Denaturalisation

Security tribunal finds Shamima Begum was trafficked but she loses anyway

Book review: Stephanie DeGooyer’s Before Borders: A legal and literary history of naturalization

Bad cases make bad law: the unintended consequences of denaturalising bad guys

Deception and denaturalisation: seek and you shall find

Asylum

Latest asylum stats show the Home Office failing on all fronts

New streamlined asylum process

Does 10 year ‘temporary refugee protection’ status breach of the Refugee Convention?

New policy: temporary permission to stay for victims of human trafficking

Trafficking victims should get leave during their asylum claim

Cases

Immigration officers don’t have to corroborate your story

No damages for unlawful no recourse to public funds policy

Differential treatment of Ukrainian and Afghan applications justified on national security grounds

Not all procedural errors need to be remitted says Upper Tribunal

More bad news from the Upper Tribunal for extended family members of EU citizens

Mar 12, 202333:20
Immigration round up: January 2023

Immigration round up: January 2023

This month Sonia and I talk through various government policies all about being horrible to migrants. It's a seemingly inexhaustible vein. Indeed, there aren't many (any?) government immigration policies NOT about being horrible to migrants. We then move on to discuss a few different nationality law issues, including the mind-boggling case of Roehrig, which appears to have effectively denaturalised tens of thousands of British citizens at a stroke. Finally, we turn to some important but rather technical updates for the lawyers amongst you.

If you would like to claim CPD points for reading the material and listening to this podcast, sign up here as a Free Movement member. There are well over 100 CPD hours of training materials available to members. You can find all the available courses here.

Government policy

The misguided allure of deterrence policy

Adults at risk in immigration detention annual report scrapped after highlighting inadequacies (mention)

High Court orders Home Secretary to immediately increase asylum support rates (mention)

Is it time for the UK to change its stance on asylum seekers working? (mention)

Operation Warm Welcome cools: over 9,000 Afghans still in temporary accommodation (mention - and update with new news on this)

Legal aid for asylum seekers is broken

Will in-country visa delays have long-term consequences for economic migration? (mention)

A modest proposal for reforming the immigration system: shorten key immigration routes

Nationality

Revised guidance on section 4L British Nationality Act 1981: the Romein principle

The reasonably foreseeable consequences of depriving someone of British citizenship

High Court casts doubt on British citizenship of children of EU citizens

For lawyers...

“Upgrading” a visa application you have already made

Permission needs to be properly sought for video link evidence from abroad

Case disposed of in error after Secretary of State fails to comply with court directions

Is Chikwamba still relevant?

Durable partner rules dumbfound the Upper Tribunal

Identifying litigation friends for vulnerable migrants

Feb 06, 202348:46
Immigration roundup: a look back at 2022 and ahead to 2023

Immigration roundup: a look back at 2022 and ahead to 2023

Colin and Sonia take a look back at 2022 and ahead to 2023 as well as covering the immigration updates from December 2022. Looking back, they talk about small boat crossings, the Ukraine and Hong Kong schemes, the impact (or lack of) the Nationality and Borders Act 2022, the Rwanda judgment, the asylum backlog and the net migration figures. Looking to the future they cover Rishi Sunak's asylum plan, whether the Home Office can cope, the prospect of yet more legislation and the ideas for immigration restrictions on families, students and workers floated via The Times over the Christmas break.

Finally, they cover several litigation developments for lawyers from December 2022 and end by discussing to big cases for EU citizens with pre settled status. Phew. 

Looking back and ahead

Free Movement review of the year 2022

Rishi Sunak announces new new plan for asylum

Has Sunak’s bank account closure plan killed off the Windrush Lessons Learned Review?

High court rules Rwanda plan is lawful

When will there be another Rwanda removal flight?

Litigation

What is the duty of candour?

Social media and the duty of candour in age assessment proceedings

False imprisonment claimant punished for failing to negotiate

Tribunal quarterly statistics: 54 week waiting time for asylum appeals and 26,000 cases outstanding

Five million pound investment to increase the number of days tribunals operate

EU citizens

Win for Pre-Settled Status holders accessing benefits

High Court finds EU Settlement Scheme breaches the Withdrawal Agreement

Jan 06, 202356:06
Immigration roundup: November 2022

Immigration roundup: November 2022

This month, Colin and Sonia mainly talk about an avalanche of asylum related news, law and updates. It's not all asylum, though, there's also some blog posts to go over on Comprehensive Sickness Insurance, third party support in spouse applications, marriages in durable partner cases, the opening of the citizenship route for Chagossian descendants and a Solicitor Regulation Authority report on immigration lawyers. They end by discussing a couple of opinion pieces Colin published, on whether the Home Office should be abolished and whether strategic litigation does more harm than good. 

The blog posts covered include:

  • What are ‘short term holding facilities’ like the Manston refugee camp?
  • Briefing: What is Article 1D of the Refugee Convention?
  • How does the asylum ‘white list’ work and what does the government plan to change?
  • Asylum backlog hits 150,000 and net migration hits 500,000
  • Understanding the Home Office’s problem with asylum decisions
  • Appendix Settlement Protection: indefinite leave to remain for people granted refugee status or humanitarian protection
  • Reducing distress when working with children in the asylum process
  • Record high referrals for potential victims of modern slavery
  • The refugee reception crisis in the UK mirrors the situation on the continent
  • Failed asylum seeker’s false identity conviction quashed
  • Home Office breaches the duty of candour in mobile phone seizures case
  • Home Office guidance update: the NHS and comprehensive sickness insurance for EEA nationals
  • Developments in third party financial support for spouse or partner visa applications
  • Post-Brexit marriages in durable partner appeals
  • New route to British citizenship for people of Chagossian descent
  • Solicitors Regulation Authority publishes new guidance for immigration work: supervision, quality, and complaints
  • Should the Home Office be abolished?
  • Strategic litigation: more harm than good?
Dec 09, 202255:23
Immigration roundup: October 2022

Immigration roundup: October 2022

Welcome to the October 2022 episode of the Free Movement immigration update podcast. This month, Colin and Sonia talk politics, asylum, the statement of changes to the immigration rules and case law. The episode is a bit longer than usual as there was a lot going on!

Politics 

Braverman attacks modern slavery victims and student families  

Assessing Braverman’s legacy as Home Secretary 

How much influence does the media have over the hostile environment? 

Home Office hotels not fit to house unaccompanied child asylum seekers 

Indefinite leave to remain applications under Appendix FM: slow, expensive and inaccessible 

Asylum 

Why has the asylum success rate gone up so much in recent years? 

Are people crossing the Channel in small boats doing anything illegal? 

Putting small boat crossings in perspective 

Ukrainians in the UK face a homelessness crisis and the government needs to act now 

What’s happening in the Rwanda legal challenges? 

Statement of Changes 

New statement of changes to the Immigration Rules: HC 719 (Afghanistan, Ukraine, and victims of trafficking) 

Statement of Changes HC 719: Ukraine Extension Scheme 

Statement of Changes HC 719: Appendix EU and Appendix EU (Family Permit) 

Statement of Changes HC 719: Appendix Temporary Permission to Stay for Victims of Human Trafficking or Slavery 

Case law 

Introducing proportionality assessments into marriage of convenience cases 

Lack of route for victims of transnational marriage abandonment is unlawful, High Court finds 

Home Office to review policy on timing of applications after single father’s right to work limbo 

Applicants from Afghanistan may not need to enrol biometrics at the time of an application 

Court of Appeal quash trafficking victim’s 2009 conviction 

Nov 07, 202248:02
Immigration update podcast: September 2022

Immigration update podcast: September 2022

Welcome to the September 2022 episode of the Free Movement immigration update podcast. This month Colin is joined again by “immigration lawyer about town”, as she put it, Sonia Lenegan. She is in danger of becoming a co-presenter if she carries on like this...

Amongst other things, they discuss Albanian asylum claims, age assessment, military conscription and asylum, Windrush and an important update to the guidance on good character in British citizenship applications.

If you would like to claim CPD points for reading the material and listening to this podcast, sign up here as a Free Movement member. There are well over 100 CPD hours of training materials available to members. You can find all the available courses here.

The 30-minute podcast follows the running order below.

Asylum and human rights

Grand Chamber finds France breached the European Convention of Human Rights

Why are so many Albanian asylum claims succeeding if the country is so “safe and prosperous”?

Government lawyers confirm that the Albanian “fast track” removal scheme will not apply to asylum seekers

New critique of Home Office country information on Albanian blood feuds

Major European judgment on age assessment process

Would Russian men fleeing conscription qualify as refugees?

Amendments to the Windrush Compensation

Other important stuff

Dependency under EU law: education as an essential living need

Guidance update: good character in nationality applications

Economic migration

How to apply for a Temporary Work – Creative Worker visa

Employers take note: all change for right to work checks from 1 October 2022

Oct 11, 202230:47
What the hell's going on with immigration policy right now?

What the hell's going on with immigration policy right now?

Colin and Sonia have a short chat about what's going on with immigration and asylum policy right now. With Truss and No 10 saying one thing and Braverman and the Home Office saying something very different, what should we make of it all? Are we going to have more students or less? Encourage skilled workers or reduce net migration? Cut unskilled migration or expand the Seasonal Agricultural Workers Scheme? We thought we'd separate out a general discussion about politics and policy this month from the normal update, to try and keep the podcast short and snappy. We'll be back early next week with the normal update covering substantive legal developments from September 2022.

Oct 07, 202214:31
Immigration update podcast, episode 104

Immigration update podcast, episode 104

Sep 12, 202241:31
Immigration update podcast, episode 103

Immigration update podcast, episode 103

Welcome to episode 103 of the Free Movement immigration update podcast. This month — the first in something like five years with no CJ McKinney — I’m starting with some material on asylum and trafficking then quickly going over a bit of immigration and nationality history and why it matters today, before moving onto various bits of Home Office news and then ending with a couple off items on deportation and foreign national offenders.

If you would like to claim CPD points for reading the material and listening to this podcast, sign up here as a Free Movement member. There are well over 100 CPD hours of training materials available to members. You can find all the available courses here.

If you listen to podcasts on your mobile phone, you can subscribe for free on iTunesSpotifyStitcher or by pointing your podcast player to the podcast feed for Free Movement. Using a mobile device and subscribing has the advantage that each new podcast can be automatically downloaded for listening to on the go.

To access previous Free Movement podcasts click here.

Aug 12, 202220:54
From Brexit to small boats: five dramatic years in UK immigration policy

From Brexit to small boats: five dramatic years in UK immigration policy

The immigration system has been through a lot since I started covering it for Free Movement five years ago. In September 2017, the UK was still in the two-year countdown to leaving the European Union, and there were even doubts about whether it would happen at all. The EU Settlement Scheme was still a twinkle in the Home Office's eye, and instead of the exciting post-Brexit points-based immigration system we had a boring old... points-based immigration system.

But while the basic architecture of the visa system remains largely the same, lots of the details have changed. Gone are the Investor and Entrepreneur routes, while in have come a host of new or (more commonly) rebranded visas: Innovator, Graduate, Global Talent, High Potential and Seasonal Worker. The flagship Skilled Worker route is now much easier to recruit into than Tier 2 (General) ever was, and visa issuances to non-Europeans have soared. That's led to a recent narrative that immigration has actually risen since Brexit -- although as Peter William Walsh of the Migration Observatory points out, this theory is somewhat lacking in key epistemic features, such as being true.

I spoke to Peter, Colin and business immigration guru Nichola Carter for a valedictory podcast looking back at the big themes and trends of the past five years in UK immigration, including Brexit, Windrush and Rwanda.

Jul 22, 202244:37
Immigration update podcast, episode 102

Immigration update podcast, episode 102

Welcome to episode 102 of the Free Movement immigration update podcast. This month we start with elements of the Borders Act 2022 coming into force before moving on to Appendix Private Life and Appendix FM. We then review the latest case law on criminal deportation, touch briefly on Zambrano applications, and conclude with Rwanda.

If you would like to claim CPD points for reading the material and listening to this podcast, sign up here as a Free Movement member. There are now over 100 CPD hours of training materials available to members. You can find all the available courses here.

The downloadable 29-minute podcast follows the running order below. Timestamps indicate when a particular section begins.

Borders Act

When is the Nationality and Borders Act 2022 coming into force?

Detailed policy on differential treatment of refugees announced

Humanitarian protection is being downgraded from 28 June 2022

Human rights (7.50)

New guidance on private life and family relationships

Judge takes “points based system” a bit too literally

Appendix FM (10.44)

Free family visas: the entry clearance fee waiver policy

Whether income is “lawfully derived” to be assessed case by case, Upper Tribunal holds

Deportation (15.16)

Supreme Court allows foreign criminal deportation case

Foreign convictions in deportation appeals

Challenge to “deport first, appeal later” process rejected

Zambrano (23.08)

No change to settlement rules for Zambrano carers despite Akinsanya judgment

Rwanda (25.05)

Home Office plans second flight to deport asylum seekers to Rwanda

How to respond to Rwanda removal notices 

Jul 08, 202229:37
CSI where am I: can EU citizens get compensation for Comprehensive Sickness Insurance?

CSI where am I: can EU citizens get compensation for Comprehensive Sickness Insurance?


Comprehensive Sickness Insurance continues to hang over the heads of many EU citizens who, over the years, were told that they needed private health coverage for their residence in the UK to be lawful. The UK government’s insistence on this was always legally controversial, but it took until after Brexit for the EU Court of Justice to rule (in a case referred to it just before the UK’s departure) that CSI was
not in fact required.


What are the implications of the ruling for EU citizens affected by the supposed CSI rule over the years? People were denied benefits, British citizenship and even protection against criminal deportation — not to mention spending money they didn’t need to. Even today, the government reserves the right to refuse naturalisation for past lack of CSI (even if it doesn’t in practice). Joining me on the podcast with thoughts on righting the wrong are Luke Piper of the3million and the CSI Justice campaign, and Professor Charlotte O’Brien of York Law School and the EU Rights and Brexit Hub.

Jun 24, 202232:18
Immigration update podcast, episode 101

Immigration update podcast, episode 101


Welcome to episode 101 of the Free Movement immigration update podcast. This month we start with some great news on fees, then some updates on the new Borders Act before turning to Rwanda and asylum more broadly. We have a quick check-in on business immigration and end on the latest with detention and bail.
If you would like to claim CPD points for reading the material and listening to this podcast, sign up 
here as a Free Movement member. There are now over 100 CPD hours of training materials available to members. You can find all the available courses here.
If you listen to podcasts on your mobile phone, you can subscribe for free on iTunesSpotifyStitcher or by pointing your podcast player to the podcast feed for Free Movement. Using a mobile device and subscribing has the advantage that each new podcast can be automatically downloaded for listening to on the go.
To access previous Free Movement podcasts click here.
The downloadable 26-minute podcast follows the running order below. Timestamps indicate when a particular section begins.

Fees
Children can now apply for a waiver of citizenship fees
Borders Act (5.20)
New statement of changes to the Immigration Rules: HC 17 (Borders Act)
When is the Nationality and Borders Act 2022 coming into force?
New regs bring key bits of Borders Act into force on 28 June
Rwanda (8.15)
Committee examines human rights implications of Rwanda asylum agreement
Immigration inspector orders rapid review of Rwanda policy
Asylum (12.37)
Useful case from Court of Justice of the European Union on Palestinian refugees
Iraq country guidance on ID cards revised
Upper Tribunal dives into the Refugee Convention exclusion clauses
Business immigration (18.15)
High Potential visa opens today 
Detention and bail (20.53)
Jun 10, 202226:32
Things are looking up for undocumented migrant children

Things are looking up for undocumented migrant children


In the States, they’re known as “Dreamers”. Children and young people who grow up perfectly integrated, only to find out that — through no fault of their own — they’re actually unauthorised migrants. Here in the UK, children who are British in every sense but legal can at least regularise on the basis of long residence: seven years for under-18s, or half their life for those aged 18-24 inclusive.


Securing immigration status under these “private life” rules is only the beginning: they still have to serve a probationary period of ten years before being able to apply for indefinite leave to remain and come out of the immigration system altogether. All this can profoundly affect identity and mental health: Anna Shekan and Roopa Tanna, my guests on the podcast this month, refer to a process of “de-integration”, as kids effectively become immigrants for the first time.


But things are improving for these British Dreamers. A concession
announced last October allowed some 18-24s to apply for settlement on the half of life route after five years rather than ten. That was followed by new Immigration Rules on faster settlement for both under-18s and 18-24s, which come into force next month.
Combined with yesterday’s announcement on free British citizenship for poor children, all this adds up to — whisper it softly — a substantial liberalisation of the rules for undocumented kids. In this episode, Anna and Roopa explain how the changes came about and how many children and young people are likely to benefit.

May 27, 202230:58
Immigration update podcast, episode 100

Immigration update podcast, episode 100


Welcome to episode 100 of the Free Movement immigration update podcast. This month we’ve got some pretty major asylum stuff to go over plus quite a few different topics, including compensation for unlawful removal, the unending saga of the English language tests, new immigration fees, changes to work visas, a big case from the Upper Tribunal on expert evidence and a rather unusual case in the Court of Appeal on deportation.
If you would like to claim CPD points for reading the material and listening to this podcast, sign up 
here as a Free Movement member. There are now over 100 CPD hours of training materials available to members. You can find all the available courses here.
If you listen to podcasts on your mobile phone, you can subscribe for free on iTunesSpotifyStitcher or by pointing your podcast player to the podcast feed for Free Movement. Using a mobile device and subscribing has the advantage that each new podcast can be automatically downloaded for listening to on the go.
To access previous Free Movement podcasts click here.
The downloadable 29-minute podcast follows the running order below. Timestamps indicate when a particular section begins.
TOEIC
Nothing wrong with official evidence of English language test cheating, Upper Tribunal holds
Compensation (5.40)
Afghan boy unlawfully removed from UK for 18 months can claim damages
Fees (8.32)
Immigration and nationality fees for 2022/23
Asylum (10.37)
Is it legal to outsource the UK’s refugee responsibilities to Rwanda?
Channel “pushbacks” policy abandoned
Afghan judge to get visa decision before having to come out of hiding
Points Based Immigration System (17.51)
The new UK Expansion Worker visa doesn’t look like an improvement
Raise minimum wage for social care workers rather than loosening visa rules, says MAC
Experts (22.05)
What are the duties of an expert witness in the immigration tribunal?
Deportation (25.08)
May 13, 202228:46
Hotel Rwanda

Hotel Rwanda


The Nationality and Borders Act 2022 hit the statute books yesterday. The Home Office
says that the Act “puts into law that those who arrive illegally in the UK – who could have claimed asylum in another safe country – can be considered as ‘inadmissible’ to the UK asylum system”, and so removed to Rwanda under plans announced just before Easter.

In fact, as Jon Featonby tells me on the latest episode of the podcast, inadmissibility provisions authorising removal to Rwanda are already part of the Immigration Rules:

345C. When an application is treated as inadmissible, the Secretary of State will attempt to remove the applicant to the safe third country in which they were previously present or to which they have a connection, or to any other safe third country which may agree to their entry.

Putting these rules in the new Act does make it harder to challenge the Rwanda scheme in court. But Sonia Lenegan says lawyers are nothing daunted, with two crowdfunded legal challenges already in the works. I understand that a third is underway in Northern Ireland.


Given the legal and logistical challenges, will refugees really end up on planes to Rwanda? And if they do, will it deter others from seeking asylum in the UK?

Apr 29, 202225:16
Immigration update podcast, episode 99

Immigration update podcast, episode 99


Welcome to episode 99 of the Free Movement immigration update podcast. This month we start with statements of changes to the Immigration Rules on Ukraine, ten-year routes to settlement and the suite of new business visas. I then try not to get too cross about Comprehensive Sickness Insurance before turning to cases on small boats, the Home Office’s duty of candour (hah!) and human trafficking. We finish on the latest deprivation of citizenship statistics.
If you would like to claim CPD points for reading the material and listening to this podcast, sign up 
here as a Free Movement member. There are now over 100 CPD hours of training materials available to members. You can find all the available courses here.
If you listen to podcasts on your mobile phone, you can subscribe for free on iTunesSpotifyStitcher or by pointing your podcast player to the podcast feed for Free Movement. Using a mobile device and subscribing has the advantage that each new podcast can be automatically downloaded for listening to on the go.
To access previous Free Movement podcasts click here.
The downloadable 30-minute podcast follows the running order below. Timestamps indicate when a particular section begins.
Ukraine
Can Ukrainians take refuge in the UK? The Ukraine Family Scheme and other routes
New statement of changes to the Immigration Rules: HC 1220 (Ukraine, Ukraine, Ukraine)
Home Office agrees to reconsider landmark Ukraine asylum case
Intended parents can bring Ukrainian surrogate mothers to the UK 
Family and private life (10.54)
New statement of changes to the Immigration Rules: HC 1118
Statement of changes HC 1118: new family and private life rules
Business immigration (13.39)
Statement of changes HC 1118: new and improved UK work visas
What do we know about the new Global Business Mobility visa?
Adjusted right to work checks to continue until 30 September 2022
EU rights (16.36)
Apr 08, 202230:34
Give me more enforcement powers, says Immigration Services Commissioner
Mar 25, 202227:30
Immigration update podcast, episode 98

Immigration update podcast, episode 98


Welcome to episode 98 of the Free Movement immigration update podcast. This month we’ve got a load of different topics to cover, from fees, investor visas and CSI to asylum, age assessments and appeals.
If you would like to claim CPD points for reading the material and listening to this podcast, sign up 
here as a Free Movement member. There are now over 100 CPD hours of training materials available to members. You can find all the available courses here.
If you listen to podcasts on your mobile phone, you can subscribe for free on iTunesSpotifyStitcher or by pointing your podcast player to the podcast feed for Free Movement. Using a mobile device and subscribing has the advantage that each new podcast can be automatically downloaded for listening to on the go.
To access previous Free Movement podcasts click here.
The downloadable 30-minute podcast follows the running order below. Timestamps indicate when a particular section begins.
Fees
Supreme Court upholds government’s right to set child citizenship fees as it chooses
New fee waivers for foreign and Commonwealth armed forces veterans
Trafficking (5.42)
How human trafficking victims can appeal against criminal convictions
What role does the European Convention Against Trafficking play in UK law?
Investors (9.07)
Investor visa closed to new applicants with immediate effect
Citizenship (11.12)
Nobody has been refused citizenship for lack of CSI
Asylum (14.24)
Article 3 protects asylum seekers against removal even if they could leave voluntarily
Can the Iranian government see what dissidents post on Facebook?
The logistics of survival: updated Somalia country guidance 
Home Office challenge to Sri Lanka country guidance fails 
Age assessment (22.07)
Mar 11, 202230:16
Russian it through: the sudden demise of the Investor visa

Russian it through: the sudden demise of the Investor visa

Closing the Investor visa route to new applicants with immediate effect was necessary, the Home Secretary said this week. If potential applicants had been given a decent period of notice, it might have attracted a last-minute flood of undesirables who “may not comply with the requirements of the Immigration Rules or who may pose national security risks”.


To which Sophie Barrett-Brown and Hazar El-Chamaa, my guests on the podcast this week, respond: why would you be granting visas to people who don’t qualify or threaten national security? The Home Office had plenty of existing powers to turn away applicants who can’t prove their money is clean or who seem that bit too close to the Kremlin. Shutting the whole thing down is disproportionate; doing so immediately, a blow to the UK’s reputation as a stable jurisdiction under the rule of law.


But we are, as so often, where we are — so what are the options now for bringing the world’s wealthy into the UK? The Home Office says that changes to the notorious Innovator route will help attract the right sort. The experts are… not convinced.

Feb 25, 202226:35
Immigration update podcast, episode 97

Immigration update podcast, episode 97

Welcome to episode 97 of the Free Movement immigration update podcast. This month we cover quite a few different asylum issues, a bit on visas for social care workers, EU rights, marriages of convenience and finishing on the hot topic of citizenship deprivation.
If you would like to claim CPD points for reading the material and listening to this podcast, sign up 
here as a Free Movement member. There are now over 100 CPD hours of training materials available to members. You can find all the available courses here.
If you listen to podcasts on your mobile phone, you can subscribe for free on iTunesSpotifyStitcher or by pointing your podcast player to the podcast feed for Free Movement. Using a mobile device and subscribing has the advantage that each new podcast can be automatically downloaded for listening to on the go.
To access previous Free Movement podcasts click here.
The downloadable 26-minute podcast follows the running order below. Timestamps indicate when a particular section begins.
Illegal working
Changes to right to work checks from 6 April 2022
Asylum (3.50)
Fast-track age assessments of newly arrived asylum seekers were unlawful
“Westernised” Iraqi family granted asylum
Ethiopia still not safe for Oromo Liberation Front supporters, country guidance confirms
Afghans already in the UK now being “resettled” under long-awaited scheme
Concessions for Afghan citizens on study and work routes in the UK
Work visas (9.27)
New statement of changes to the Immigration Rules: HC 1019 (social care visas)
EU rights (10.56)
Uncertainty persists for Zambrano carers following Court of Appeal ruling
EU citizens fighting deportation keep full residence rights
Ex-partners don’t retain EU law residence rights after domestic abuse
Enforcement (16.13)
Upper Tribunal revisits “marriages of convenience”
Feb 11, 202226:23
When can the Home Secretary take your citizenship away?

When can the Home Secretary take your citizenship away?

One of the Home Secretary’s more startling powers is to take people’s British citizenship away where they acquired it by fraud or it is “conducive to the public good”. In the latter case, losing citizenship often amounts to exile in the interests of national security: the tactic is to wait until the person is abroad before making the deprivation order. Under the Nationality and Borders Bill, the person need not be told about the order at all.


The Home Office tells us that this power is used “sparingly”. Between 2010 and 2018, “only around 19 people a year were deprived of their citizenship on ‘conducive to the public good’ grounds”. Whether that is rare or routine depends on your point of view, but the average conceals an upward trend in recent years (insofar as figures are available). This week alone, Free Movement covered two separate appeals against citizenship deprivation — one of which was argued by our latest podcast guest, Alasdair MacKenzie of Doughty Street Chambers.


I spoke to Alasdair about the law on citizenship deprivation, his experience fighting cases in the SIAC national security court — “like wrestling with a shadow” — and the role of judges in policing one of the state’s most draconian powers.

Jan 28, 202229:17
Immigration update podcast, episode 96

Immigration update podcast, episode 96

Welcome to episode 96 of the Free Movement immigration update podcast. This month we’re covering December 2021 and we’ll go over some EU rights issues, a bit on deportation, a bit on asylum, touch on human rights and address some fascinating procedural issues of law.
If you would like to claim CPD points for reading the material and listening to this podcast, sign up 
here as a Free Movement member. There are now over 100 CPD hours of training materials available to members. You can find all the available courses here.
If you listen to podcasts on your mobile phone, you can subscribe for free on iTunesSpotifyStitcher or by pointing your podcast player to the podcast feed for Free Movement. Using a mobile device and subscribing has the advantage that each new podcast can be automatically downloaded for listening to on the go.
To access previous Free Movement immigration update podcasts click here.
The downloadable 36-minute podcast follows the running order below. Timestamps indicate when a particular section begins.
EU rights
Supreme Court overturns expansion of benefits rights for EU citizens
No EU citizenship, no extended family members
Long residence (4.41)
Court of Appeal game-changer for validity and continuous residence
Deportation (8.52)
The effect of deportation on children: Imran case reversed
Deportation law up for MORE revision: Supreme Court to hear appeal in HA (Iraq) case
Man who has never left the UK avoids deportation after seven-year legal battle
Asylum (15.23)
Seeking asylum isn’t illegal yet, criminal courts confirm, quashing small boat convictions
Inflexible biometrics policy for refugee family reunion declared unlawful
Government refuses to relax asylum seeker right to work rules
Carriers’ liability (24.06)
What counts as an “effective system” of lorry checks?
Jan 14, 202235:51
Immigration update podcast, episode 95

Immigration update podcast, episode 95

Welcome to episode 95 of the Free Movement immigration update podcast. This month we cover some developments on EU citizens’ rights, several cases on immigration appeals, the latest work visa statistics, and then a few court and tribunal judgments on asylum, human trafficking and deportation. Our thanks to Iain Halliday who ably stands in for Colin this month.
If you would like to claim CPD points for reading the material and listening to this podcast, sign up 
here as a Free Movement member. There are now over 100 CPD hours of training materials available to members. You can find all the available courses here.
If you listen to podcasts on your mobile phone, you can subscribe for free on iTunesSpotifyStitcher or by pointing your podcast player to the podcast feed for Free Movement. Using a mobile device and subscribing has the advantage that each new podcast can be automatically downloaded for listening to on the go.
To access previous Free Movement immigration update podcasts click here.
The downloadable 34-minute podcast follows the running order below. Timestamps indicate when a particular section begins.
EU rights
Dependent relatives to get EU Settlement Scheme family permits
EU law still applies in legacy appeals under the EEA Regulations
Appeals (5.53)
Upper Tribunal revisits issue of permission for video evidence from abroad
Upper Tribunal reminds everyone: this is not the place for new evidence
Reopening a finalised immigration appeal is actually pretty hard
Work visas (14.17)
Record number of Global Talent visas awarded
New statement of changes to the Immigration Rules: HC 803 (pork butchers)
Asylum (20.27)
The meaning of “admissible” in statelessness cases

Cessation, Article 3 and removing refugees from the UK
Human trafficking (24.12)
Immigration Enforcement to decide human trafficking claims
Dec 22, 202134:07
Immigration update podcast, episode 94

Immigration update podcast, episode 94


Welcome to episode 94 of the Free Movement immigration update podcast. This month we kick off with some human rights developments and some fairly consistently good news on asylum (which is nice for a change). There are quite a few business immigration issues to run over quickly before we turn to developments in the English Channel and the international law of the sea for a nice, depressing ending…
If you would like to claim CPD points for reading the material and listening to this podcast, sign up 
here as a Free Movement member. There are now over 100 CPD hours of training materials available to members. You can find all the available courses here.
If you listen to podcasts on your mobile phone, you can subscribe for free on iTunesSpotifyStitcher or by pointing your podcast player to the podcast feed for Free Movement. Using a mobile device and subscribing has the advantage that each new podcast can be automatically downloaded for listening to on the go.
To access previous Free Movement immigration update podcasts click here.
The downloadable 24-minute podcast follows the running order below. Timestamps indicate when a particular section begins.
Human rights
Early settlement concession for young people living half their lives in the UK 
Confirmed: Home Office can ignore human rights claims
Asylum (5.28)
Give trafficked asylum seekers permission to stay, says High Court
Asylum seeker right to work policy declared unlawful, again

Claiming humanitarian protection in medical treatment cases

Seasonal Workers (12.35)
New immigration concession for fuel tanker drivers
Visa scheme for HGV drivers and poultry workers launched
Pork butchers latest to get temporary visas
Other work visas (15.38)
The Intra-company Transfer visa could be getting a new lease of life
How to apply for an International Sportsperson visa
Channel crossings (17.25)
Nov 12, 202123:40
How do you prove you’re a gay refugee?
Oct 29, 202123:46
Immigration update podcast, episode 93

Immigration update podcast, episode 93


Welcome to episode 93 of the Free Movement immigration update podcast, a week later than advertised. This month we start with changes to the Immigration Rules and other news around work and student visas, and then the latest on deprivation of citizenship. We review some new case law on asylum, talk about why the Home Office is now conceding so many appeals, before ending on EU citizens’ rights and the inevitable coronavirus material.
If you would like to claim CPD points for reading the material and listening to this podcast, sign up 
here as a Free Movement member. There are now over 100 CPD hours of training materials available to members. You can find all the available courses here.
If you listen to podcasts on your mobile phone, you can subscribe for free on iTunesSpotifyStitcher or by pointing your podcast player to the podcast feed for Free Movement. Using a mobile device and subscribing has the advantage that each new podcast can be automatically downloaded for listening to on the go.
To access previous Free Movement immigration update podcasts click here.
The downloadable 24-minute podcast follows the running order below. Timestamps indicate when a particular section begins.
Points Based Immigration System
New statement of changes to the Immigration Rules: HC 617
HGVisas: what do we know so far?
A look at the skilled immigration sponsorship “roadmap”
Deprivation of citizenship (7.51)
Deprivation of citizenship for fraud after Begum
After deprivation of citizenship comes months or years in limbo
Asylum (11.58)
Fast Track asylum appeals were not necessarily unfair, Supreme Court confirms
Serious crime enough for humanitarian protection to be revoked
Appeals (14.10)
Home Office conceding 30% of appeals, Pres says
EU rights (16.46)
Helpful changes for family members applying under the EU Settlement Scheme
Did the Home Office inadvertently strengthen the rights of Zam...
Oct 15, 202124:13
Podcast: fixing UK immigration advice
Sep 24, 202128:05
Immigration update podcast, episode 92

Immigration update podcast, episode 92


Welcome to episode 92 of the Free Movement immigration update podcast. This month we begin with EU citizens’ rights before moving to a couple of cases on Article 3 of the European Convention on Human Rights as it applies to migrants. We then discuss asylum, including a disappointing Supreme Court decision on age assessment, before concluding with the latest on immigration appeals. 
If you would like to claim CPD points for reading the material and listening to this podcast, sign up 
here as a Free Movement member. There are now over 100 CPD hours of training materials available to members. You can find all the available courses here.
If you listen to podcasts on your mobile phone, you can subscribe for free on iTunesSpotifyStitcher or by pointing your podcast player to the podcast feed for Free Movement. Using a mobile device and subscribing has the advantage that each new podcast can be automatically downloaded for listening to on the go.
To access previous Free Movement immigration update podcasts click here.
The downloadable 28-minute podcast follows the running order below. Timestamps indicate when a particular section begins.
EU rights
Good news for EU citizens making late applications for post-Brexit residence rights
Court of Appeal lays down hyper-strict approach to EU asylum claims
Human rights (8.10)
The AM (Zimbabwe) test now applies to destitution too
Systems failure denied immigration detainee his HIV meds, judge finds
Asylum (13.12)
Supreme Court upholds Home Office age assessment policy
Offshore processing doesn’t stop the boats, Australian experts warn
New Home Office policy on medical evidence in asylum claims
High Court backs law firm in dispute over £194,000 asylum bill
Appeals (21.22)
Court of Appeal confirms that 3C leave can be revived
Upper Tribunal forced to U-turn on “new matters” appeal loophole
Sep 10, 202128:35
Podcast: what now for Afghan refugees?

Podcast: what now for Afghan refugees?


The UK’s emergency evacuation of Afghan civilians ends today, ahead of the 31 August deadline for the withdrawal of Western troops from Afghanistan. Where does that leave Afghans hoping to escape the Taliban for safety in Britain? That’s the subject of this episode, in which I’m joined by two lawyers with extensive experience in this area: Jamie Bell of Duncan Lewis Solicitors and Sarah Pinder of Goldsmith Chambers.  
We discuss the two
existing resettlement programmes for Afghans with ties to the British government; what we know about the additional Afghan citizens’ resettlement scheme announced on 18 August (not much); and what happens to those already in the UK with pending asylum cases (the Home Office is adopting a “wait and see approach”, for now, with a pause on decision-making). As ever, once more information emerges on the issues that remain uncertain, we’ll cover it on the website and/or the weekly newsletter
Aug 27, 202124:07
Immigration update podcast, episode 91

Immigration update podcast, episode 91


Welcome to episode 91 of the Free Movement immigration update podcast. This month we begin with a Supreme Court decision on deportation and some developments on immigration judicial reviews. We then move to business immigration, where a new type of visa has just been announced, and then off in the other direction completely to cover asylum and refugee issues. We end with a couple of court decisions on deception and long residence. Note that we are not covering the Immigration Bill published in July, as we did a
separate podcast on that a couple of weeks ago.



If you would like to claim CPD points for reading the material and listening to this podcast, sign up here as a Free Movement member. There are now over 100 CPD hours of training materials available to members. You can find all the available courses here.



If you listen to podcasts on your mobile phone, you can subscribe for free on iTunesSpotifyStitcher or by pointing your podcast player to the podcast feed for Free Movement. Using a mobile device and subscribing has the advantage that each new podcast can be automatically downloaded for listening to on the go.



To access previous Free Movement immigration update podcasts click here.



The downloadable 29-minute podcast follows the running order below. Timestamps indicate when a particular section begins.



Deportation



Supreme Court dismisses deportation appeal of man living in UK since he was 9



Judicial review (6.23)



Judicial Review Bill to abolish most Cart cases



Upper Tribunal can accept late acknowledgment of service in judicial review cases



Points Based Immigration System (11.17)



UK government promises new “high potential” visa with no job offer required



Half of all Investor visa holders are being investigated, report claims



Asylum and refugees (16.11)



Double win for refugees seeking backdated benefits



Aug 13, 202129:15
Podcast: five things you may have missed in the Borders Bill

Podcast: five things you may have missed in the Borders Bill


The Nationality and Borders Bill 2021 looks set to sail through Parliament, passing its second reading stage in the House of Commons this week by
101 votes. The headline provisions of the Bill are by now well known — indeed, notorious — so we’re not going to spend this episode rehearsing the various ways in which it tries to make life more difficult for asylum seekers. Instead, we’ve picked out some of the less high-profile elements that have received less scrutiny to date.
Colin himself joins me for this episode. We discuss the Bill’s proposed changes to:

* The rules on citizenship for stateless children
* The definition of a “particular social group” in domestic asylum law
* Advance warning of removal from the UK
* Human trafficking claims made in “bad faith”
* Existing immigration legislation, which may be consolidated

For much more on all things Borders Bill, see our recent series of briefings on each Part:

* Part 1 (citizenship reforms)
* Part 2 (asylum)
* Part 3 (criminal offences)
* Part 4 (trafficking)
* Part 5 (miscellaneous)

Finally, for those interested in why the Home Office doesn’t care what you think about the Bill, the government’s response to its consultation exercise was published yesterday.
Jul 23, 202122:31
Immigration update podcast, episode 90

Immigration update podcast, episode 90


Welcome to episode 90 of the Free Movement immigration update podcast. We’re covering June 2021, which feels a little unreal given the
Nationality and Borders Bill had landed shortly before we were due to record. But life goes on, and we’ve got a few points about the EU Settlement Scheme to cover; a couple of cases on family immigration and one on long residence; several asylum issues; a couple of deportation cases to touch on; and a couple of cases in which the Court of Appeal schools the immigration tribunal in how to do its job.
If you would like to claim CPD points for reading the material and listening to this podcast, sign up here as a Free Movement member. There are now over 100 CPD hours of training materials available to members. You can find all the available courses here.
If you listen to podcasts on your mobile phone, you can subscribe for free on iTunesSpotifyStitcher or by pointing your podcast player to the podcast feed for Free Movement. Using a mobile device and subscribing has the advantage that each new podcast can be automatically downloaded for listening to on the go.
To access previous Free Movement immigration update podcasts click here.
The downloadable 28-minute podcast follows the running order below. Timestamps indicate when a particular section begins.
EU Settlement Scheme
What happens to EU citizens who miss the settled status deadline?
High Court finds the EU Settlement Scheme rules for Zambrano carers unlawful
EU Settlement Scheme coronavirus policy relaxed
Family immigration (9.26)
“Reasonable” to expect UK-born 11-year-old to move to Bangladesh, Court of Appeal says
Getting permission to remain in the UK as an adult dependent relative: not likely
Long residence (13.25)
“Open-ended” overstayers can’t rely on ten-year lawful residence rule
Asylum (14.57)
High Court condemns treatment of asylum seekers unlawfully held at Napier barracks
High Court strikes down pandemic protections for refused asylum seekers
Jul 09, 202128:05
Podcast: deadline day
Jun 25, 202125:22
Immigration update podcast, episode 89

Immigration update podcast, episode 89


Welcome to episode 89 of the Free Movement immigration update podcast. This month is a bit of a bumper episode, so we may hurry through some updates to keep it a manageable length, but you can read more about each item at the links below. We start with a couple of rather concerning court cases involving massive Home Office delays before turning to immigration policy. We’re then off to the Upper Tribunal to discuss a series of new decisions on family migration and the conduct of immigration appeals, before ending with a couple of quick coronavirus updates.
If you would like to claim CPD points for reading the material and listening to this podcast, sign up 
here as a Free Movement member. There are now over 100 CPD hours of training materials available to members. You can find all the available courses here.
If you listen to podcasts on your mobile phone, you can subscribe for free on iTunesSpotifyStitcher or by pointing your podcast player to the podcast feed for Free Movement. Using a mobile device and subscribing has the advantage that each new podcast can be automatically downloaded for listening to on the go.
To access previous Free Movement immigration update podcasts click here.
The downloadable 27-minute podcast follows the running order below. Timestamps indicate when a particular section begins.
Delay
Congolese man unlawfully detained for three and a half years 
Man who won British citizenship by fraud gets to keep it thanks to Home Office inaction 
Immigration policy (6.05)
New Plan for Immigration 2: Electronic Boogaloo
The UK-India migration deal
Asylum right to work policy changed to allow (a bit) more discretion 
EU citizens’ rights (11.26)
Migrants win improved access to personal data held by the Home Office 
Court throws out challenge to digital-only status for EU citizens 
Family migration (13.59)
Sponsor changing job is not a reason to refuse a spouse visa
Windrush family priced out of UK win human right...
Jun 11, 202126:57