Home Office denies passengers ‘waved through’ airports without full checks after claims by striking border staff
Members of the armed forces are filling in for striking Border Force staff at airports, but do not have the power to stop or detain suspicious passengers who might otherwise be stopped at passport control.

Sunday 25 December 2022 10:29, UK

An arrivals board displays a message warning users of terminal 5 about industrial action by Border Force staff, at Heathrow Airport, near London, Britain, December 23, 2022. REUTERS/Peter Nicholls
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The Home Office has denied claims by striking border staff that passengers who might otherwise be stopped at airports are being “waved through” by military personnel standing in for striking workers.

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Two Border Force staff members told Sky News that passengers were being waved through to avoid queues during strikes and that military personnel do not have the power to stop or detain people.

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Members of the Armed Forces are providing cover for public services during strikes over winter.

One Border Force officer at Manchester Airport said several members of staff told them that arriving passengers who would normally be questioned are being “waved through in order to avoid queues building up amid strikes”.

They added: “This order is said to have come from management at Manchester Airport. This would mean that people who are potentially unlawfully entering the UK/wanted by the authorities or police/on a watch list/previously refused entry are entering the UK unchecked.”

Around 1,000 Border Force staff in the Public and Commercial Services (PCS) union are striking over pay and conditions from 23 December to Boxing Day.

A Border Force staff member at Heathrow Airport told Sky News that the army on immigration control “can’t stop or detain people” as they cannot issue a form known as an IS81.

The form gives immigration officers the authority to detain people for further questioning.

The Home Office said it was ‘categorically untrue’ any arrivals were not being properly checked and said that Border Force staff who were not striking were on hand at passport control and could issue the form if required.

A spokesman said: “Border Force has developed robust contingency plans which prioritise keeping our citizens safe and our borders secure.”

People wait in the arrivals hall at terminal 5 of Heathrow airport
He added: “Non-striking Border Force staff, with the full range of appropriate powers, are continuing to complete their vital roles and we have spread our resources flexibly to ensure there is sufficient cover to fulfil our key priorities.

“Military personnel, civil servants and volunteers are supporting a range of services and all deployed contingency are sufficiently trained for the activities they are required to undertake.”

The staff member at Heathrow said: “Our job is to protect the population and the British public, to protect jobs, people from harm.

“Basically the vast majority of the job can’t be done. I have the information from multiple people. If you cannot issue an IS81, you cannot stop someone. All you can do is let them through.

“Managers left managing the control is that unless there is direct evidence of criminality, they are not to stop them. People who are coming in to work illegally, live illegally, study illegally – and that’s not criminal, it’s an immigration issue. Unless you’re aware that this person is a hit on the computer system, wanted by the police, you can’t hold anybody up.”

Mark Serwotka, PCS general secretary, said: “No one’s being stopped because the government has adopted a sticking plaster approach to this problem.

“We warned before the strikes started that military personnel with five days’ training wouldn’t be able to do the jobs of experienced, professional Border Force officers.”

A Manchester Airport spokesperson said: “To be absolutely clear, we as the airport operator are not involved in the immigration process… to our knowledge, the immigration process is operating as normal.”

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