Guernsey Press

UK asylum backlog hits new record of 160,000

The figure is 60% up from 100,564 for the same period in 2021.

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The UK’s asylum backlog has topped 160,000 for the first time since current records began.

A total of 160,919 asylum seekers were waiting for an initial decision on their claim at the end of December.

The number of people waiting more than six months for an initial decision was 109,641 at the end of 2022, up 77% year-on-year from 61,864.

It comes as the Home Office launched a plan to fast-track some asylum claims in a bid to cut the soaring backlog.

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(PA Graphics)

In December Prime Minister Rishi Sunak pledged to reduce the asylum backlog by the end of 2023 as he vowed to “stop the boats” crossing the Channel.

The Home Office has about 10 months to clear 92,601 initial asylum claims which were in the system as of the end of June 2022.

The rising backlog is “due to more cases entering the asylum system than receiving initial decisions”, the Home Office said.

Asylum applications in the UK
(PA Graphics)

More than three-quarters (76%) of initial decisions in 2022 were grants of refugee status, humanitarian protection or alternative forms of leave.

The Home Office said this was a “substantially higher grant rate” than in pre-pandemic years when around a third of initial decisions were grants.

About 12,000 people from Afghanistan, Syria, Eritrea, Libya and Yemen, who have applied for asylum in the UK and are waiting for a decision, will be eligible for the Home Office’s plan to speed up processing applications.

These applicants have been picked because they come from nations that typically have a high grant rate in the UK of more than 95%.

Asylum seekers subject to the process, which applies to adult applicants and their child dependants but not lone migrants under the age of 18, will not be automatically interviewed.

People detected crossing the English Channel in small boats
(PA Graphics)

Some campaigners criticised the plans as “clumsy” amid reports that asylum seekers will be told to fill out the form in English. Others welcomed efforts to reduce the backlog but said the approach could throw up more “bureaucratic hurdles”.

Applicants could still be called for an interview and any who do not provide the required information and evidence could have their claim rejected.

Those granted asylum will be allowed to work and will be expected to find their own accommodation.

Officials insisted the move was not an “asylum amnesty” and stressed thorough security checks will still be carried out.

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