Politics
BBC asylum investigation misses the point
On 15 April, the BBC published an investigation into a “shadow industry of law firms and advisers… charging thousands of pounds to help migrants pretend to be gay in order to stay in the UK”. As ever, the focus of the investigation misses the point. Namely, that hostile immigration policies force people to take increasingly desperate measures.
Legal advisers help migrants pose as gay to get asylum, undercover BBC investigation finds https://t.co/33ujvSDzRk
— BBC Breaking News (@BBCBreaking) April 15, 2026
BBC isn’t asking the right questions
Demonstrating that the ‘gay cover’ is being used because people are out of options, one of the advisers told the BBC investigator:
Listen to me. There is nobody who is real. There is only one way out in order to live here now and that is the very method everyone is adopting.
The adviser in question charged £2,500 for their services, so they’re clearly profiting from the situation. Whenever you clamp down on safe and legal options, however, you create avenues for this sort of activity.
A point of comparison is with the smuggling networks who help refugees and migrants reach the UK. As the Green Party wrote in a policy paper on the matter:
If safe routes existed, people would take them. Instead, we have taken away their ability to arrive within permissible routes and thus force them to take more and more dangerous routes. Not only are we causing these risks and ensuring the growth of smuggling networks
The BBC could ask ‘why are we making this country increasingly hostile towards people who want to come here and contribute?‘
Instead, the British media has internalised the idea that the environment must become more and more hostile, and that when this inevitably leads to workarounds, we must all pretend to be shocked.
Anyway, it’s always good to remember:
fixing our asylum system to one that works better for everybody is perfectly possible — Zoe Gardner (@ZoeJardiniere) April 14, 2026
The UK’s deporter-in-chief, meanwhile, used the story as an excuse to talk tough:
Anyone abusing protections for people fleeing persecution over gender or sexual orientation is beyond contempt.
Let me be clear: try to defraud the British people to enter or remain in the UK and your asylum claim will be refused, your support cut off, and you will find yourself…
— Shabana Mahmood MP (@ShabanaMahmood) April 15, 2026
When you purposefully build a cruel system, you can’t be surprised when people do what they can to protect themselves.
Narratives
The BBC investigation further adds to the narrative that refugees are duplicitous. As the investigation shows, however, these people are being led into making decisions based on the idea that it’s the only option they have.
If you want people to behave honestly, you need an honest and transparent system. Instead, we have one which forces people to jump through hoops – not because there’s merit to doing so, but because Labour and the Tories decided it would hold Nigel Farage at bay.
This reporting will also place further suspicion on LGBTQ+ asylum seekers. Speaking on this, the Peter Tatchell Foundation said:
The Home Office must not allow fraudulent claims to weaken its resolve to give asylum to LGBTs who have suffered, or are at risk of, arrest, imprisonment, torture and the failure of police in their home countries to protect them from mob violence and attempted murder.
Safeguarding the integrity of the asylum system is essential to maintaining public trust and, most importantly, to ensuring that real victims of homophobic persecution are not overlooked or refused a safe haven
Reactivity
Under Keir Starmer, Labour’s immigration policy has been reactive. Unfortunately, it hasn’t been reactive to the needs of refugees or to the prosperity of the country; it’s been reactive to the politics of Reform UK.
Dancing to Farage’s tune has prove to be disastrous for Labour’s polling. Hopefully they wise up to that reality soon, and they don’t simply double down on creating a hostile environment that serves as a breeding ground for problems.
Featured image via BBC
By Willem Moore
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