Interim Inspector Issues Update

My Priorities

Since returning to the ICIBI as interim Independent Chief Inspector (ICI) on 3 June my priorities have been to complete the inspections and other work that was already in hand but had been paused due to the absence of an ICI; to identify and begin a new set of inspections; and to ensure that the ICIBI's working relationship with ministers and the Home Office was in good shape.

Work requiring completion

There were five pieces of work that needed to be completed: the Annual Report 2023-24; an inspection of the Immigration Enforcement Competent Authority (IECA); another of Contingency Asylum Accommodation (CAA); plus two Country of Origin reports (Rwanda and Georgia). As of now, the Annual Report and the Rwanda COI Report are completed and with the Home Secretary awaiting publication, and the Georgia Report will follow shortly.

In the case of the IECA and CAA inspections, in June I asked the Home Office for further evidence and information, in order to ensure that the inspection reports would be as current as possible when finalised. This material has now been analysed and incorporated. The completed IECA report was sent to the Home Secretary on 7 August. The CAA report was sent to the Home Office for factual accuracy checking on 1 August, and I am hoping to send the completed report to the Home Secretary by the end of this month.

New inspections

In June, I also set the Inspectorate to work on five new inspection topics:

  • Fee waivers (including the timeliness and consistency of Home Office decision making)
  • Clandestine entry to the UK (including the civil penalties scheme for lorry drivers and hauliers, and the Border Force operation to deter and detect clandestine entrants, particularly at the juxtaposed controls in northern France)
  • Age assessments (Home Office processes and practice)
  • Contact management (with a focus on reporting requirements and maintaining knowledge of the whereabouts of individuals, including non-detained foreign national offenders, and promotion of voluntary returns)
  • General Maritime (looking at the efficiency and effectiveness of Border Force's assessment, mitigation of and response to risks posed through passengers and goods entering the UK)

I asked the Home Office to provide preliminary evidence in relation to each of these topics. Most of that evidence has been received and reviewed and I am now in a position to proceed with a 'call for evidence' for the first two of the above inspections. These will be posted on this website in the next couple of days, along with

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