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At least 270 people have died in UK awaiting asylum application decisions since 2015, figures show | UK News

At least 270 migrants have died in the UK while awaiting a decision on their asylum applications since 2015, figures have revealed.

Home Office data released in response to a Freedom of Information (FOI) request by Sky News showed the majority of those who died – 171 – were male.

Three of them were teenagers or children.

Migration charities told Sky News the deaths are of people who have often “fled horrors such as war” and “undergone treacherous journeys to seek sanctuary”.

The data is limited to cases where the Home Office has received a notification that the person has died, meaning the true figure could be higher.

Charity Care4Calais said: “These figures confirm what we have known for some time – too many people seeking asylum die waiting for the government to decide their future.

“It’s time the new government not only sped up the decision-making process, but ensured it delivered high-quality decisions that offer people the protection they seek.”

Migrant Help, a UK-based charity supporting people seeking asylum, said: “Every loss of life during the asylum process is a devastating tragedy.

“People who have often escaped unimaginable trauma and undergone treacherous journeys to seek sanctuary in the UK deserve the support and security they need while waiting for their application to be processed.”

The data, extracted in October, runs up to the end of June of this year – the last reportable period in line with published immigration statistics at the time of the FOI.

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Watch back: Why immigration isn’t being reduced

Deaths in the English Channel

It comes as Sky News can further reveal following a separate FOI request that 2024 saw as many migrant deaths in the English Channel as the four previous years combined.

While 67 people died up to 8 November this year, 56 people died across 2020, 2021, 2022, and 2023.

These were mostly in 2021, with 34 deaths – while there were four deaths in 2022 and 12 in 2023.

The majority of the deaths took place on the French side of the Channel, and as such the figures are not UK government data.

According to data from Migration Watch, a thinktank that monitors migration flows to and from the UK, while 2024 will finish with more small boat crossings than 2023, 2021, and 2020, it will have around 10,000 fewer crossings than 2022.

Charity Refugee Action claimed “hostile border policies” had forced people to take increasingly dangerous routes to reach the UK – like the English Channel – and this “ultimately” led to more people losing their lives.

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Small boat crossings and immigration remain one of the key political topics, as the government battles to control surging numbers post-Brexit.

In an announcement earlier this month, Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer outlined a series of milestones to judge his government but didn’t include one on immigration.

This is despite over 20,000 people crossing the Channel in small boats since Labour won the election this summer.

The government has previously said it is targeting smuggling gangs responsible for the crossings.

A Home Office spokesperson said: “Our thoughts and sympathies are with the families and friends of those who have died.

“This government has restarted processing asylum claims which were stuck in an inherited backlog.”

Andrew Tate allowed to leave Romania while awaiting trial, court rules | UK News

Andrew Tate will be allowed to leave Romania while awaiting trial on charges of human trafficking, a court has ruled.

The controversial influencer and his brother Tristan can travel within the EU without restrictions while awaiting the trial, the Bucharest Tribunal ruled. Until Friday, the Tates had been banned from leaving Romania where he is awaiting trial.

The decision is not final and can be appealed by prosecutors.

Read more: Who is Andrew Tate?

Tate, 37, was charged in mid-2023 along with his brother for human trafficking, rape, and forming a criminal gang to sexually exploit women.

Two female suspects from Romania have also been charged as part of the case.

They have all denied the allegations against them.

In a post on X on Friday, Tate wrote: “I’m free. For the first time in three years I can leave Romania.”

He also referred to the charges as a “sham case” before advertising a platform that says it teaches the skill of money-making.

Andrew Tate and his brother Tristan in Bucharest today. Pic: AP
Image:
Andrew Tate (right) and his brother Tristan in Bucharest in May. Pic: AP

Tate, who has almost 10 million followers on X, repeated these sentiments in a video that accompanies the post and adds: “The process is the punishment, in the end I’ll be innocent.

“My judges decided… I’m allowed to leave Romania, so do we take the (Ferrari) SF90 to Italy, the (Maserati) MC20 to Cannes, the (Ferrari) 812 Competition to Paris, where do I go?”

The Tate brothers, both former kickboxers with dual US and British citizenship, were held in police custody during the criminal investigation from late December 2022 until April 2023 to prevent them from fleeing the country or tampering with evidence.

They were then placed under house arrest until August, when courts put them under judicial control, a lighter preventative measure.

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From March: What next for the Tate brothers?

“Andrew and Tristan are still determined to clear their name and reputation; however, they are grateful to the courts for placing this trust in them,” the brothers’ lead defence lawyer Eugen Vidineac said in a statement.

Romanian prosecutors have said the Tate brothers recruited their victims by seducing them and falsely claiming to want a relationship or marriage.

Read more:
Football club defends decision to refund Tate donation
Tate to regain access to supercars and properties
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They said the victims were then taken to properties outside the capital Bucharest, and through physical violence and mental intimidation were sexually exploited by being forced to produce pornographic content for social media sites that generated large financial gain.

In a separate case, Tate was served at his home in Romania with a civil lawsuit lodged by four British women after a claim was issued by the High Court in London, according to a statement released in May by McCue Jury & Partners, the law firm representing the four women.

The four allege Tate sexually and physically assaulted them and reported him to British authorities in 2014 and 2015.

After a four-year investigation, the Crown Prosecution Service decided in 2019 not to prosecute him.

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The alleged victims then turned to crowdfunding to pursue a civil case against him.

In a third case, the Tate brothers also appeared in March at the Bucharest Court of Appeal after British authorities issued arrest warrants over allegations of sexual aggression in a UK case dating back to 2012 to 2015.

The appeals court granted the British request to extradite the Tates to the UK, but only after legal proceedings in Romania have concluded.

Tate, a self-described misogynist, has gained millions of fans by promoting an ultra-masculine lifestyle that critics say
denigrates women.