Sudanese asylum seekers challenge Home Office rule changes for refugees
Two Sudanese asylum seekers are legally challenging recent UK Home Office rule changes that halve refugees' leave to remain from five years to 30 months, significantly extending the wait for permanent settlement to 20 years. They argue the policy is indirectly discriminatory and ineffective as a deterrent, citing high grant rates for Sudanese claims and their own experiences of torture.

Briefing Summary
AI-generatedTwo Sudanese asylum seekers are legally challenging recent UK Home Office rule changes that halve refugees' leave to remain from five years to 30 months, significantly extending the wait for permanent settlement to 20 years. They argue the policy is indirectly discriminatory and ineffective as a deterrent, citing high grant rates for Sudanese claims and their own experiences of torture. The Home Secretary, Shabana Mahmood, previously accused refugees of "asylum shopping." The UN Refugee Agency has also expressed concern, warning of increased administrative burdens, uncertainty for refugees, and negative impacts on integration. The new rules also restrict family reunification, requiring financial proof of support.
Article analysis
Model · rule-basedKey claims
5 extractedThe policy is also reducing the right for refugees to bring immediate family members, requiring financial support demonstration.
The UN’s refugee agency condemned the policy, stating it would place additional administrative burdens and create greater uncertainty for refugees.
The new policy requires refugees to wait 20 years for settlement eligibility, compared to five years previously.
Two Sudanese asylum seekers are challenging Home Office plans to halve refugees’ leave to remain from five years to 30 months.
In 2025, 96% of Sudanese asylum claims resulted in a grant of protection.