Immigration inspector steps down

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John Vine, the independent chief inspector of Britain’s border and immigration services, has announced that he will leave his post on 31st December this year, six months before the end of his current contract.

John Vine was forced to hand over responsibility for publication of immigration reports to Theresa May
John Vine was forced to hand over responsibility for publication of immigration reports to Theresa May

Mr Vine has said that he is leaving his position because he wants to move on. He said: “Leaving at the end of the year and before the next general election, rather than in July 2015 when my term is due to end, makes sense.”

But rumours abound that Mr Vine has become extremely frustrated because the home secretary, Theresa May, has delayed the publication of a number of his reports and has at times removed sections of reports that are embarrassing to the Government. Mr Vine used to be responsible for the publication of his own reports. He released them at midnight, which allowed news media to write stories based on them the next morning. The reports frequently resulted in embarrassing headlines for the Government. It is said that Mrs May was not prepared to see this continue and she consequently took responsibility for the publication of the reports herself.

In 2012, Mr Vine discovered the existence of a ‘migration refusals pool,’ a previously unknown collection of nearly 200,000 migration files. The cases were mostly asylum claims and, in every case, the applicant had been refused permission to stay in the UK. Having refused applicants permission to remain in the UK, the now defunct UK Border Agency (UKBA) had taken no action to try to remove them because it did not know where they were.

In October 2013, he revealed that the ‘e-borders’ immigration management scheme first proposed by Tony Blair and developed over a period of about ten years had cost hundreds of millions of pounds and was all but useless.

In November 2012, a report revealed that the former head of the UKBA, Lin Homer, who had since been promoted to run Her Majesty’s Revenue and Customs, had presided over an agency with many serious organisational issues, and like her successors had repeatedly misled the Home Affairs Committee about the size of backlogs.

Since Mrs May has taken responsibility for their publication, reports are now published with no advanced warning at various times of day and sometimes months after their completion. There are currently at least two reports that were submitted to the Home Secretary a long time ago which are yet to be published. Another report was edited to remove details of staff shortages in the immigration services; some say caused by Mrs May’s decision to make hundreds of staff redundant.

Labour’s shadow immigration minister said that Mr Vine’s resignation was “an indictment of Theresa May’s attempts to silence his criticisms of her failing immigration system.”

Mr Vine said: “I have raised my concerns with the change in publication processes with the Home Secretary and the Home Affairs Committee previously, but this is not the reason I have decided to resign.”

Outstanding reports

There are two reports that the chief inspector has written which have still not been released by the Home Office.

A report into the Home Office’s systems and procedures for dealing with allegations about illegal immigrants was submitted to the Home Secretary on 29th May and another report into the workings of ‘Operation Nexus,’ a Home Office initiative to deport foreign criminals, was sent to her on 26th June. Four other reports are nearing completion and will be delivered to the Home Secretary over the coming weeks.

The chairman of the Home Affairs Committee of the House of Commons has demanded that all completed reports should be published. He told journalists: “When Mr Vine last appeared before the committee we were very concerned about the number of reports that he had produced which had not been published by the Home Office. All of these must be released immediately.”

John Vine has been chief inspector for six years. He is held in high regard by the Home Affairs Committee because of the thoroughness of his reports. When his last term of office finished in 2013, committee chairman Keith Vaz hoped that he would stay on for a further term. Mr Vaz said that he was ‘surprised and disappointed’ by news of Mr Vine’s resignation.

Mrs May responded to news of Mr Vine’s resignation by thanking him “for his hard work and dedication in scrutinising the vital work of controlling immigration and protecting Britain’s borders.”