
UK backs human rights plan to accelerate illegal migration removals
UK backs European plan to accelerate illegal migration removals32 minutes ago Share Save Add as preferred on GoogleDominic CascianiHome and Legal CorrespondentReutersThe UK and other European countries have signed a...
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Key developments are emerging from the global stage. UK backs European plan to accelerate illegal migration removals32 minutes ago Share Save Add as preferred on GoogleDominic CascianiHome and Legal CorrespondentReutersThe UK and other European countries have signed a landmark declaration pushing courts to rethink how they decide on migration cases, in a bid to make it easier to deport illegal migrants. The agreement, unveiled at a summit in Moldova on Friday, warns that European democracy itself could be undermined unless states are able to respond more effectively to people smuggling and modern migration pressures. It urges the European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg to leave most migration cases to member states.
Speaking ahead of the summit, UK Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper described the deal as a "common-sense approach" and said she wants to ensure systems "can't be unfairly gamed". The European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR) was drafted after the Second World War to set out basic rights and freedoms across Europe and is enforced by the Strasbourg court. The new declaration is not a rewriting of the human rights law - which would take years - but is a political signal from all the member states to human rights judges that there needs to be greater consideration for public interest and democracy when deciding on migration cases.
The Details
It was signed by the 46 members of the Council of Europe, the political body which oversees the human rights court and is entirely separate to the European Union. The document says pressures facing European countries have either changed significant or were unforeseen at the time the human rights convention was drafted. It states have "the undeniable sovereign right" to establish their own immigration policies and remove foreign nationals in the public interest.
Critics of Friday's declaration said the wording will undermine human rights protections or have no effect on migration because judges could ignore it. Council of Europe, StrasbourgUK Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper meeting Alain Berset, head of the Council of Europe, for Friday's signing People smugglingTurning specifically to people smuggling - either by gangs or orchestrated by hostile states - the declaration says that the phenomenon "risks undermining support for and the integrity of the Convention system". It argues that countries including the UK should be allowed to pursue deals with other countries, including the potential creation of "return hubs" beyond Europe.
"A hostile state or other actor cannot be allowed to undermine European democracies and the values on which the Convention is founded and to abuse the system that it was established to protect," the paper says. Italy has already struck a deal with Albania to accommodate rejected migrants there. The UK has been exploring similar to deals - but nothing concrete has come of those talks yet.
The development has drawn wide international attention, with diplomatic circles watching closely.





