Shabana Mahmood’s immigration and asylum bill to go before MPs next week
Shabana Mahmood's immigration and asylum bill is scheduled to be presented to MPs next week, proposing increased forced removals of asylum seekers, stricter age checks for those claiming to be children, and limitations on human rights law applications. The bill aims to alter how Article 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights is applied in immigration cases and strengthen age assessment methods, potentially using AI.

Briefing Summary
AI-generatedShabana Mahmood's immigration and asylum bill is scheduled to be presented to MPs next week, proposing increased forced removals of asylum seekers, stricter age checks for those claiming to be children, and limitations on human rights law applications. The bill aims to alter how Article 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights is applied in immigration cases and strengthen age assessment methods, potentially using AI. It also plans to replace independent asylum tribunals with a Home Office-based appeals body and allow immediate forced removal after appeals are exhausted. Refugee charities express concern that the bill is being rushed, fearing negative impacts on family reunification and child protection, particularly for victims of modern slavery. Opposition is expected from some Labour, Liberal Democrat, and independent MPs.
Article analysis
Model · rule-basedKey claims
5 extractedRefugee charities are concerned about the bill being pushed through quickly and anticipate restrictions to family reunion for refugees.
The bill will outline a new structure for asylum tribunals by replacing an independent court system with a new appeals body within the Home Office.
Shabana Mahmood's immigration and asylum bill includes plans to increase forced removal of people refused asylum.
The bill is expected to set out plans to strengthen age assessments for asylum seekers.
The bill is expected to direct how article 8 of the European convention on human rights (ECHR) is applied in immigration and deportation cases.