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A stack of sealed documents symbolizing visa restrictions, set against a background of the UK and DRC flags.
PoliticsAI Analysis

UK Imposes Visa Sanctions on DRC as Asylum 'Hardline' Era Begins

2 min readSource

The UK has imposed visa restrictions on the DRC over its refusal to accept returned migrants. Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood's new reform moves toward a strict Danish-style system.

The handshake is over; the iron curtain is falling on UK visa policy. The United Kingdom has slapped visa restrictions on the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), accusing its leadership of blocking the return of undocumented migrants and foreign criminals. In a statement released late on December 27, 2025, the Home Office confirmed that fast-track services and VIP privileges for DRC officials are being revoked immediately.

The Rise of the Danish-Style Asylum Model

Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood isn't pulling any punches. These measures are the opening salvo of a radical overhaul designed to make refugee status temporary. Under the new rules, refugees will have their status reviewed every 30 months, and the wait for permanent residency has been hiked from 5 years to an astonishing 20 years. While Angola and Namibia earned praise for their cooperation, Mahmood warned that the DRC could face a total visa shutdown unless they 'do the right thing'.

Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s government is desperate to stem the tide of irregular arrivals. This year alone, more than 39,000 people have crossed the English Channel in small boats—a figure that surpasses the total for 2024. To counter this, the government plans to legislate against using the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR) as a shield against deportation.

Surging Numbers vs. Human Rights Outcry

The data paints a picture of a system under immense pressure. Asylum applications hit a record 111,000 in the year leading to June 2025. However, Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper noted that since July last year, the UK has removed over 50,000 individuals without a right to remain, marking a 23% increase in enforcement efficiency.

We expect countries to play by the rules. If one of their citizens has no right to be here, they must take them back. Take your citizens back or lose the privilege of entering our country.

Shabana Mahmood, UK Home Secretary

Critics aren't staying silent. Former Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn slammed the policy as 'draconian' and an attempt to appease far-right sentiments across Europe. Enver Solomon of the Refugee Council warned these plans won't deter crossings but will instead prevent hardworking refugees from building settled lives in the UK.

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