New 2-tier system being considered to reduce country’s 150,000-person backlog Syrian, Afghan applications have 98% success rate in UK: Home Office LONDON: The UK is to establish a two-tier asylum system to speed up claims from people fleeing war-torn countries such as Syria and Afghanistan, in plans set to be announced next week. The country faces a significant backlog of 150,000 applications driven in part by mass migration of people from places such as Albania, which is considered a safe country. A huge number of people have taken to crossing the English Channel illegally in small boats to reach the UK, which has placed enormous burden on the state’s ability to house and support asylum-seekers. The UK Home Office says by the end of the year it expects at least 50,000 people to have arrived in the country to claim asylum. Its figures also show that around 98 percent of applications from people fleeing Afghanistan, Syria and Eritrea, 87 percent from people from Sudan and 82 percent of Iranians — who make up around a third of the backlogged asylum claims in total — end up being approved. Under the proposals, those from the likes of Afghanistan and Syria will now be prioritized and their processes streamlined, removing things such as follow-up interviews after initial approval, and security and identity checks. It is thought that this will allow more deserving refugees to start their lives in the UK, as it will allow them to find work and their own accommodation. Applications from Albanians, meanwhile, will also be dealt with quicker, with a deal to be struck between London and Tirana to expedite the process of deporting those whose applications are denied. One source told The Times that the new scheme is being overseen directly by UK Prime Minister Rishi Sunak, who has “completely taken control of the policy” from Home Secretary Suella Braverman, who had previously gone on record to say speeding up application processes based on nationality “wouldn’t be the right way to go.” The source said: “He’s got teams of Home Office officials working directly to him, and Suella has been sidelined.” A Home Office source told The Times that the department is looking at “focusing resources on very high grant rate cases.”
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