Extracts from Home Office questions: NCA - July 12
Tuesday, 13 July 2021 08:56
People Smuggling Sir Edward Leigh (Gainsborough) (Con) What steps
her Department is taking to tackle people smuggling. The
Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for the Home Department
(Chris Philp) People smuggling is a despicable crime, often leading
to tragic deaths such as the 39 we saw in Purfleet. The Government
are determined to crack down on organised immigration crime, which
is why we last week we introduced a new Nationality and Borders
Bill, which will receive its Second Reading...Request free trial
People
Smuggling
(Gainsborough) (Con)
What steps her Department is taking to tackle people
smuggling.
The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for the Home
Department ()
People smuggling is a despicable crime, often leading to
tragic deaths such as the 39 we saw in Purfleet. The Government are
determined to crack down on organised immigration crime, which is
why we last week we introduced a new Nationality and Borders Bill,
which will receive its Second Reading next week. It is also why in
2020 the National Crime Agency and
immigration enforcement were involved in 750 arrests in relation to
organised immigration crime.
Following the ridiculous decision by the Crown Prosecution
Service not to prosecute illegal migrants on the grounds that they
have
“no choice in how they travel”,
as if they do not voluntarily pay a people smuggler €10,000
or voluntarily get in a dinghy, or the even more absurd reason that
we can rely on “administrative removal channels” when corrupt human
rights lawyers string such claims out for years and nobody is ever
deported, where does that leave the absolutely good Bill of my
right hon. Friend the Home Secretary? She wants to arrest these
people in the channel. Does this decision make it even more urgent
that we bring in safe havens for these people in a third
country?
My right hon. Friend is quite right to point out that
countries such as France and Germany are obviously safe and that
someone genuinely in need of protection or asylum can claim asylum
quite properly and easily in such countries rather than attempting
dangerous and unnecessary crossings over the English channel.
Notwithstanding the CPS’s recent announcement, we can, do and will
prosecute people who organise and pilot dangerous boat crossings
across the English channel for gain or with the intention of
avoiding immigration controls. The Bill, which will receive its
Second Reading next week, critically contains provisions that will
close some of the loopholes that may have led to the CPS’s recent
decision and will make it clear that any attempt to arrive in the
United Kingdom from a safe place, such as France, will be rightly
treated as a criminal offence.
Child Sexual
Abuse
(Basingstoke)
(Con)
What steps she is taking to tackle child sexual
abuse.
The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for the Home
Department ()
The UK Government are committed to eradicating all forms of
child sexual abuse and continuing to be a global leader in tackling
these crimes. The Government’s tackling child sexual abuse strategy
sets out our ambition to drive action across Government, law
enforcement and society as a whole to combat this heinous crime in
all its forms.
Mrs Miller
I thank my hon. Friend for that answer. She knows that
the National Crime Agency is
receiving more than 20,000 child abuse referrals a year from
organisations such as Facebook and Instagram. If the services are
end-to-end encrypted, those referrals may not be possible in
future, so how are the Government addressing this really important
problem to ensure that those who abuse children online continue to
be brought to justice?
The implementation of end-to-end encryption in a way that
intentionally blinds tech companies to content on their platforms
will have a disastrous impact on public safety, and we remain
seriously concerned with Facebook’s end-to-end encryption
proposals. The safety and security of the public is at the heart of
this issue, and Facebook must continue to work with us to embed the
safety of the public in its system designs. Companies have a
responsibility to prevent the proliferation of child sexual abuse
imagery and to protect children from predators on their
platforms.
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