Labour doubles down on Starmer’s call to deport more Bangladeshi illegal migrants despite fury from party members

LABOUR today doubled down on Sir Keir Starmer’s call to deport more Bangladeshis, despite a furious backlash from party members.

Shadow Education Secretary Bridget Philipson insisted it was vital to have a “fair system that works for the British people”.

Bridget Phillipson today doubled down on Labour’s claim that more illegal migrants need to be sent to Bangladesh

Dan CharityThe Shadow Education Secretary was grilled on the latest crisis engulfing Labour by The Sun’s Political Editor Harry Cole[/caption]

Dan CharitySir Keir Starmer called for an uptick in Bangladeshi deportations at The Sun’s Election Showdown special[/caption]

Sir Keir’s comments on The Sun’s Election Showdown sparked an explosive row after he singled out Bangladesh as somewhere not enough illegal migrants are sent back to.

The Labour chief told a live audience of Sun readers: “I’ll put the staff back in the returns unit, I’ll make sure I’ve got planes going off, not to Rwanda because that’s an expensive gimmick.

“At the moment people coming from countries like Bangladesh are not being removed because they’re not being processed.”

But only 108 asylum applications were recorded from the South Asian country in the last four quarters, including dependants.

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Edited clips of the comments have been shared across Bangladeshi community WhatsApp groups and triggered fire and fury among activists with ties to the South Asian state.

Yesterday the Deputy Leader of Tower Hamlets Labour resigned over the comments.

In a scathing statement Sabina Akhtar said: “I was a proud Labour party member, but I find I cannot be proud of this party anymore when the leader singles out my community and insults my Bangladeshi identity.”

Candidates representing large Bangladeshi communities jumped to distance themselves from the comments.

Uma Kumaran posted on X: “I understand why many are upset about an edited clip they have seen online.

“Across Stratford and Bow we are enriched by the pioneering contributions and the hard work of the British Bangladeshi people.

“I will always stand up for our Bangladeshi community.”

Amid the backlash, Ms Phillipson told Never Mind The Ballots: “Bangladesh is an example of one of a number of countries where we have a bilateral agreement in place so that we can return people where it’s determined that they don’t have a right to be here in the UK.

“I think we have seen in recent times as well similar arrangements with Albania that’s meant that we’ve been able to speed up the processing of cases and returning people where they don’t have a right to be here.

“That’s the principle that is driving it, making sure we’ve got a fair system that works for the British people.”

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The Shadow Education Secretary added: “I think what the public want and what I want to see and what a Labour government will deliver if we have the opportunity, is a fair and functioning asylum system and a fair and functioning immigration system.

“There is an important, I think, national story around the contribution that migrants have made to our country. They worked in the NHS, served in the armed forces – and it’s about having a fair system where people are aware of their rights and their responsibilities.

“Where people don’t have a right to be in our country we make sure that they are returned elsewhere.”

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