If you come to UK illegally, you will not be able to stay: PM Sunak

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(FILES) In this file photo taken on December 9, 2022 migrants, picked up at sea attempting to cross the English Channel, are helped ashore from an Royal National Lifeboat Institution (RNLI) lifeboat, at Dungeness on the southeast coast of England. - UK high court judges ruled, on December 19, 2022 that the British government's controversial plan to deport migrants to Rwanda is lawful, after flights were thwarted through legal challenges by charities and asylum-seekers. In a bid to deal with the unprecedented number of arrivals, UK Prime Minister Rishi Sunak has sought to continue his predecessor Boris Johnson's scheme to deport migrants thousands of miles away to the African country. (Photo by Ben Stansall / AFP)

Migrants are helped ashore from an RNLI lifeboat, at Dungeness on the southeast coast of England, on Dec 9, 2022.

PHOTO: AFP

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LONDON - Anyone arriving illegally in Britain will be prevented from staying, Prime Minister Rishi Sunak said in an interview published on Sunday, ahead of new legislation which is expected to be set out this week.

Under pressure from his own lawmakers to find a solution to the flow of migrants arriving in Britain across the channel from Europe, Mr Sunak has made stopping small boats one of his five key priorities.

“Make no mistake, if you come here illegally, you will not be able to stay,” he told the Mail on Sunday newspaper.

A new law to tackle the issue is due to be set out on Tuesday, the newspaper reported, after more than 45,000 people made the perilous crossing last year.

The Mail on Sunday reported that under the new law asylum claims from those who arrive on small boats would be ruled inadmissible and they would be removed and permanently banned from returning.

Last year, former Prime Minister Boris Johnson agreed to a deal to send tens of thousands of migrants, many having made the journey from Afghanistan, Syria or other countries suffering war, more than 6,400km away to Rwanda.

The policy has faced a legal battle after the first planned deportation flight was blocked by a last-minute injunction granted by the European Court of Human Rights. It was ruled lawful by London’s High Court in December, but opponents are seeking to appeal that verdict.

Asked on Sky News whether those arriving in Britain illegally would be banned from claiming asylum, the government’s Northern Ireland Secretary Chris Heaton-Harris said: “I believe so, yes.”

“Should people come to this country illegally, then they will be returned or sent to somewhere like Rwanda.”

Asked about how genuine asylum seeks would be able to seek refuge, Mr Heaton-Harris said: “I’m quite sure there will be more safe and legal routes.”

“Our laws will be simple in their intention and practice – the only route to the United Kingdom will be a safe and legal route,” Interior Minister Suella Braverman told the Sun on Sunday newspaper. REUTERS

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