Source · Select Committees · Human Rights (Joint Committee)

Recommendation 104

104 Acknowledged

Section 29 of the IMA is not yet in force.

Conclusion
Section 29 of the IMA is not yet in force. Upon commencement, it would amend section 63 of the Nationality and Borders Act 2022, which sets out disqualifications to providing a recovery period139 to a potential victim of modern slavery based on grounds that the person is a threat to public order or has claimed to be a victim in bad faith. Section 63(3) NBA sets out categories of person who are considered to be a threat to public order. Section 29 of the IMA adds two further categories to that list, namely: a. persons liable to deportation from the UK under section 3(5) or (6) of the 1971 Act on grounds of it being conducive to the public good or as a result of deportation of a family member or a recommendation following conviction; 137 Medical Justice and Bail for Immigration Detainees, BSAI0033, para10 138 Medical Justice and Bail for Immigration Detainees, BSAI0033, para 3 139 Following a positive Reasonable Grounds decision, adult victims will be provided with a Recovery Period of at least 30 calendar days. This period begins on the day the Reasonable Grounds decision is made. During this period, support and assistance will also be provided on a consensual basis and potential victims will not be removed from the UK. 39 b. persons liable to deportation under any other enactment that provides for such deportation.
Government Response Summary
The government justifies its decision to retain Section 29 of the IMA, which, if commenced, would expand public order disqualifications for modern slavery protections to all foreign national offenders, asserting its compliance with ECAT and ECHR.
Government Response Acknowledged
HM Government Acknowledged
As noted above, the Government is committed to ensuring an effective immigration and asylum system and has retained certain measures of the IMA 2023 where they have been assessed as beneficial to that aim. The Bill repeals the vast majority of modern slavery provisions in the IMA 2023, including those linked to the ‘duty to remove’. The sole modern slavery measure being retained (section 29) would, if commenced, bring all foreign national offenders into scope for mandatory consideration of disqualification from modern slavery protections on public order grounds. This process for disqualification, the Public Order Disqualification (POD), exists already under section 63 of the Nationality and Borders Act 2022 (NABA 2022), as noted by the Committee’s report. Section 63 enables victims or potential victims of modern slavery to be disqualified from the protections against removal, modern slavery specific assistance and support, and any requirement to grant limited leave to remain under section 65 of NABA 2022 if they are a threat to public order or have claimed in bad faith. The changes to section 63 that would be made by section 29 of the Illegal Migration Act 2023 would create a duty on competent authorities to apply the POD to foreign national offenders, unless the competent authority considers there are compelling circumstances that mean the POD should not apply to the person. Foreign national offenders with prison sentences of any length would be considered a threat to public order, and would be eligible for disqualification from the protections and support of the National Referral Mechanism (NRM). Cases would continue to be determined on a case-by-case basis. While section 29 has not yet been commenced, it is appropriate to retain it at this stage, so that it can be considered alongside the Government’s wider plans for modern slavery reform. The Council of Europe Convention against Trafficking of Human Beings (Article 13) allows for withholding of support on the grounds that an individual poses a risk to public order or where it is found that victim status is being claimed improperly. The POD is therefore compliant. The changes that section 29 of the IMA 2023 would, if commenced, make to section 63 of the NABA 2022 are also entirely consistent with Article 4 of the ECHR (Prohibition of slavery and forced labour).