"Despite repeated warnings, the Home Office is still unable to remove foreign offenders from the UK. We agree with the Prime Minister that the Home Office should have done better…The public would expect our membership of the European Union to make it easier to deport European offenders, but this is clearly not the case," Committee Chair Keith Vaz was quoted in the statement as saying.
EU citizens comprise the largest groups in the UK prison population, according to the Home Affairs Committee. Nearly 10 percent, or 983, are from Poland, 764 are from Ireland, and 635 are from Romania. Offenders from the European Union should be prioritized when removing criminals, the committee stressed.
The latest ONS migration figures indicate that long-term migration to the United Kingdom has increased by 20,000 in 2015, reaching a net figure of 333,000 for that year. Of these, 184,000 migrants came from EU countries.