
The Indian national became the first person on Thursday to deported to France on the basis of a new treaty between the country and the United Kingdom.
The Indian national, whose name was not revealed, arrived in the UK illegally through the English channel aboard a small ship.
The man was flying to Paris from Heathrow Airport on an aircraft French plane under the so-called “One-in, One-Out” agreement recently as part of a return agreement in the UK-France.
It is said that he arrived in the UK in early August and still lives there illegally.
The sources of the domestic office confirmed that a deported man was an Indian national who is expected to be offered a paid voluntary return to his home country as soon as he returned to France. He would not be able to ask for asylum and could continue the forced deportation if the voluntary system did not appear.
Development comes a month after the British home office claimed in August that Indian nationals in binding centers had almost doubled since London’s intervention against illegal immigrants.
The United Kingdom’s court refuses to attempt to delay deportation
In another case, the British court refused to temporarily stop another migrant – Eritrean man – from deported to France, allowing his flight to take off early in the morning.
On Thursday evening, the court made a three -hour emergency hearing, and was taken off at 06:15 BST on Friday.
During the hearing of Judge Sheldon, he stated that there was no legal justification that temporarily prevents the deportation of the man to France.
His lawyers claimed that he could have been exposed to illegal trading and eventually got to England 6 August.
“The first vital step”
British domestic Minister Shaban Mahmood has described the deportation as a “vital first step” to secure the boundaries of the country and add that they “attacked smuggling gangs”.
“This is an important first step to secure our borders. He sends a message to people who are moving in small ships: if you enter the UK illegally, we will try to remove you,” Mahmood said.
“I will continue to question any last minute, thieving attempts to frustrate the removal in the courts. Great Britain will always play its role in helping those who actually fled the persecution, but it must be done by safe, legal and managed routes-no dangerous intersections,” she said.
The man to be deported on Thursday is one of the first dose of migrants detained by British border forces in the new contract, which entered into force in August as a pilot system to run until June 2026.
(Tagstotranslate) Indian national