
The Alliance of Foreign Criminals Awaiting Deportation in the UK will be published for the first time.
According to the Email Online, Home Secretary Yvette Cooper has ordered officials to release data by the end of the year to show the nationality and crimes of those awaiting deportation.
Shadow Internal Secretary Chris Philp said the announcement showed that Labour “submission” under pressure from the Conservative Party and demanded disclosure of data.
Government sources insisted that this is possible, it is possible, as Ms. Cooper ordered a home office statistician to overhaul the system when she refused to answer questions about the nationality of foreign offenders.
“We are not only deporting foreign criminals who have never seen while Chris Philp and Robert Jenrick were in charge of the Interior Department, but we will also release more information about the criminal,” the Interior Ministry source said.
The latest data shows that 19,244 foreign criminals awaited deportation at the end of 2024, up from 17,907, when the Conservatives left the office in July and at the end of 2022, 14,640.
Despite 3,594 criminals being deported during the first nine months of Labor’s tenure, the rise is still increasing, up 16% over the same period in the past 12 months.
It is reported that due to the combination of early releases due to overcrowding of prisons, instability and diplomatic barriers, and the backlog of human rights calls for deportation, it is understood to help increase the increase in criminals awaiting deportation.
Home Ministry source said: “Any foreign national who abuses our country’s hospitality and commits serious crimes should be in the full force of the law without a doubt and evacuate from the UK with the earliest opportunity.
“But we also want to ensure that the public is on the number of foreign criminals waiting for deportation, where they come from and the number of crimes they promise, which is why this is why the first time, which is why ministers are dedicated to the wider range of data on officials in this category of offenders and ensure that data is released in the future in the open and cross-border copies.
Foreign nationals sentenced to 12 months or more are automatically deported, but the Home Secretary can seek evacuation, those sentenced to lesser sentences if their presence in the UK is detrimental to the public interest.
Shadow Attorney General Robert Jenrick welcomed the news, saying: “We are finally seeing mass immigration intensifying the difficult reality of crime in our country.”
Mr. Jenrik, who was formerly under the leadership of the previous administration, added: “Frankly, the public should have known this a long time ago.”