Migration news roundup week commencing 02 February 2026

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View of Houses of Parliament from bridge over river Thames

 

This Migration News Roundup presents a selection of news, policy, research and statistics from the previous week on migration-related topics. The contents of each story do not necessarily reflect the views of Migration Yorkshire.

UK borders and migration policy

On small boat arrivals: 

Five people were arrested when an investigation stopped a group of people leaving the UK in the back of a lorry at Dover. This unusual scenario is thought to be a smuggling network recruiting HGV drivers to transport people across borders. (Source: National Crime Agency) 

A journalistic investigation into Brook House immigration removal centre near Gatwick describes the use of force and restraints at the site in some detail. The report uncovered data showing 165% more incidents than the next highest centre. (Source: Independent) 

Specific migrant groups

On asylum and refugee systems: 

The Home Office has introduced a pilot allowing eligible 16- and 17-year-old asylum seekers to proceed to a substantive interview without submitting a Statement of Evidence (SEF) form, if they have legal representation and have consented to take part. (Source: UK Visas and Immigration) 

On migrant workers: 

A data briefing on EU migration to and from the UK highlights an 80% drop in EU immigration since 2016, most of which occurred before Brexit restrictions were introduced in 2021. (Source: Migration Observatory)  

Seven years after thousands of people from the ‘Windrush generation’ were wrongly categorised as ‘illegal migrants’, stories of recent injustice are still emerging. George Campbell, who arrived from Jamaica in the 1960s, recounts how the uncertainly of his legal status has led to years of hardship. (Source: the Guardian) 

Cohesion and integration

‘Common ground: building cohesive communities’ provides national guidance for councils on how to tackle misinformation and hate crime and embedding social cohesion as a priority. It includes examples from South-West Yorkshire NHS, North Yorkshire, Doncaster and the Humber. Relatedly, this article considers how the decline of community institutions in neighbourhoods has led to the strengthening of the far-right, but with some pushback. (Sources: Belong, The Conversation) 

Jane and Andrew, hosts from Refugees at Home, were featured alongside their guest Nadine on Songs of Praise. (Source: BBC iplayer, 34 minutes) 

Arman talks about his experience of moving to the UK as a refugee and progressing from a volunteering role to gaining employment. (Source: Scottish Refugee Council) 

International news

Spain plans to grant legal status to an estimated half a million undocumented migrants by offering one‑year renewable residence permits to those with clean criminal records who arrived before summer 2025, marking its first large‑scale regularisation in two decades. (Source: BBC) 

After the largest human trafficking case in Dutch history, a court sentenced an Eritrean trafficker to 20 years in prison for torturing and extorting migrants in Libyan camps. (Source: InfoMigrants) 

Stories that inspired us this week

Climate Action Ilkley, working with Solidaritech CIC, is requesting donations of unwanted but working IT items to support digital inclusion of asylum seekers and refugees in Yorkshire and Humber. (Source: Ilkley Gazette) 

Kat, a Muay Thai boxing expert from Kent shares how her experience of teaching martial arts to women living in refugee camps in Greece has been empowering for both the participants and herself. (Source: BBC) 

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