Policy paper

Nationality and Borders Bill: Removal to a safe third country factsheet

Updated 13 October 2023

What does the Nationality and Borders Bill do in relation to removal to a safe third country?

  • The Nationality and Borders Bill amends Section 77 of the Nationality, Immigration, and Asylum Act 2002, in order to make it easier to remove someone to a safe third country without having to issue a certificate.

  • This means it is possible to remove someone to a safe third country whilst their asylum claim is pending, provided that removal is in line with the UK’s international obligations.

  • This supports the future object of enabling asylum claims to be processed outside the UK and in another country. The purpose of such a model is to manage the UK’s asylum intake and, alongside the suite of other measures included within the Bill, deter irregular migration and clandestine entry to the UK.

What is a ‘safe third country’?

  • “Safe” in this context means the removal of an individual would not breach their rights under Article 3 of the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR), including that they will not be sent onwards to another country in contravention of their ECHR rights.

  • Under Article 3 of the ECHR, no one shall be subjected to torture or to inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment. This places an absolute bar on removing an individual from the UK where there are substantial grounds to believe that there is a real risk that the individual would experience such treatment in the country to which they are being removed.

  • This means that we must not act in such a way which means a person’s life is at risk, or that they may suffer from inhuman and degrading treatment. This government is clear we will not act in a way that is contrary to these fundamental human rights.