DiscoverByline Times Audio ArticlesShabana Mahmood's Asylum Plans Will Put Human Trafficking Victims at Risk, Warn Anti-Slavery Groups
Shabana Mahmood's Asylum Plans Will Put Human Trafficking Victims at Risk, Warn Anti-Slavery Groups

Shabana Mahmood's Asylum Plans Will Put Human Trafficking Victims at Risk, Warn Anti-Slavery Groups

Update: 2025-11-19
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Campaigners against modern slavery and human trafficking have told Byline Times that the Government's new asylum and immigration proposals - including key legal changes to the ECHR and the Modern Slavery Act - are likely to worsen the conditions that lead to human-trafficking, labour and sexual exploitation and forced criminality. It could do so by making immigration status more precarious and access to support much more limited, they claim.

While Mahmood has framed the proposals as a moral imperative to fix a broken system, campaigners warn that they will only fuel further instability, fear, and division.

A series of weekend press briefings from Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood set out what she calls "the most sweeping asylum reforms in modern times." The package, published on Monday, is based on the argument that "illegal migration is making this country a more divided place."

The reforms aim to cut the number of people seeking asylum through "tough" deterrence measures designed to reduce "pull factors," expand the Government's ability to deport refused applicants, and create a small number of "safe and legal" routes initially capped at "a few hundred" people - a fraction of the tens of thousands who currently apply for asylum annually.

Many of the measures would leave people in the UK for long periods on short, renewable permissions to stay, with repeated reassessments and no clear route to long-term security. The plans also involve reinterpretations of key protections in the European Convention on Human Rights and the Modern Slavery Act.

While publicly welcomed by figures including Kemi Badenoch, Nigel Farage, Richard Tice and Stephen Yaxley-Lennon, known as Tommy Robinson, the Danish-inspired model was condemned by multiple Labour MPs, charities and advocacy groups as cruel, short-sighted and performative.

"Everyone, regardless of where they are from and how they move, must be able to live in safety and with dignity," Sian Lea, Head of UK and European Advocacy at Anti-Slavery International, told Byline Times. "Instead of centring compassion, the UK Government is doubling down on harmful rhetoric and policies espoused by its predecessor."

Mahmood argues that the strict new rules will deter people from paying criminal gangs. But Anti-Slavery International has warned that an inadequate number of safe routes actually "increases the profitability of smuggling and people trafficking."

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Anti-Slavery International also warned that the reforms could pose specific risks for people affected by modern slavery - defined as exploitation "for personal or commercial gain," including trafficking, forced labour and debt bondage.

"We know that policies based on border security and enforcement create and exacerbate the conditions that perpetuate modern slavery," Lea said. "Precarious immigration status only pushes people further into the hands of exploiters by increasing fear of authorities and creating additional barriers to accessing work, education or other crucial support."

Asylum seekers in the UK are generally banned from working while their claims are processed, given around £7 per day and housed in Government accommodation such as asylum hotels. Labour-exploitation researchers argue this leaves people "in a state of limbo," often working in the "shadow" economy where they're highly vulnerable to abuse and dependent on "exploitative employers or landlords for survival." People working irregularly are often too afraid to report mistreatment for fear of immigratio...
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Shabana Mahmood's Asylum Plans Will Put Human Trafficking Victims at Risk, Warn Anti-Slavery Groups

Shabana Mahmood's Asylum Plans Will Put Human Trafficking Victims at Risk, Warn Anti-Slavery Groups

Matt Gallagher