home Secretary There is a plan to launch a fast-track plan to deal with asylum backlog, which aims to change decisions within weeks.
Yweet cooper Said Labor In the hope that an “major overhaul” of the appeal process was planned that it would help in making a significant dent in the numbers.
“We need a major overhaul of the appeal [process] And this is what we are going to do in the autumn … If we speed up the decision making system and still maintain the growing returns, we hope that we will be able to make a significant decrease in the overall numbers in the refuge system, as it is really the best way to restore orders and control, “Ms. Cooper told The Sand Times.
The newspaper must compress the process, citing a source familiar with the plans, to be “decisions and returns” within weeks within weeks.
How much cutting the government is under pressure asylum seekers Waiting for the consequences of claims or appeals are kept in hotels.
The Home Secretary has earlier stated that she was eager to install a fast-track system for decisions and appeals, so that people from the countries considered safe would not sit in the shelter system for a long time.
He said, “We should be able to take those decisions really faster, be able to take those decisions, ensure that they actually go through the appeal system and then also make sure that they are really back quickly,” he told the Home Affairs Committee in June.
“This would mean that a fast-track system with the main refuge system, I think it will be really important in the context of ensuring that the system is appropriate.
“To be able to do this will require law, as well as a new system design.”
The government is also demanding to reduce the number of channel crossings. More than 25,000 Migrants This year has reached small boats so far.

Tension at Refugee Hotels has erupted in recent weeks, with A Protests and counter-protest On Saturday, outside the Barbikan Hotel in North London, and also in Newcastle.
Chancellor Rahel reeves By the end of this Parliament, House has promised to abolish the use of hotels for shelter seekers.
The shelter seekers and their families are kept in temporary housing. If they are waiting for a claim or appeal results, it is assessed that they are not able to support themselves independently.
They are kept in hotels if there is not enough space in the housing provided by local authorities or other organizations.