PM's plan is considered "head" compared to the conservative controversial Rwanda deportation policy.
Prime Minister Keir Starmer said the UK is talking with third countries about establishing a “return hub” to receive the rights of asylum seekers to refuse to leave in the country, as part of a resuppression of immigration.
British leaders are facing increasing pressure to cut the number of immigrants reaching the British coast amid the growing popularity of the far-right reform party in the UK.
He said Thursday that he was talking with “many countries” about hosting a “return to the hub” that would gain failed asylum seekers who exhausted all calls to deal with it before being deported.
Starmer did not state which country he was talking to about the plan for the plan, which compared with a plan developed by the former Conservative government that deported asylum seekers to Rwanda, and Starmer fired Starmer immediately after his office in July, which began taking office in July.
Apparently, the topic is not the agenda of the meeting held by Starmer in Tirana, Albanian Prime Minister Edi Rama designated in a joint press conference that his country last year agreed to a similar pattern of return, which is "a rest" and "take time to test".
The plan is currently in trouble in court, with the Italian operating facility held in Albania each year with up to 36,000 asylum seekers per year.
Starmer acknowledged that building a facility was not a "silver bullet" that could stop the dangerous crossing of the UK channel on a boat, which has arrived so far this year, making it possible to see a record number in 2025.
But, coupled with other measures to address smuggling gangs, he said the plan would “allow us to endure this evil trade.”
Starmer claims his new Labour government was forgotten by former conservative leaders, which he said did not deal with asylum claims.
"This will basically apply to those who exhaust all legal routes to stay in the UK but are trying to use various strategies to stagnate - whether it is losing their paperwork or using other strategies to thwart their evacuation."
The announcement is the latest in a series of tough new immigration policies, including plans to double the length of time immigrants are eligible to settle in the country, which are widely seen as an attempt to boycott support from the far-right Firebrand Nigel Nigel Farage UK party.