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04 February 2022
Issue: 7965 / Categories: Legal News , Immigration & asylum
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NLJ this week: Government all at sea on plans to use the Navy to deter asylum seekers

The government recently suggested the British Navy could be used to deter asylum seekers from crossing the English Channel on dinghies and small boats
It also indicated sonic weapons could be used. Writing in this week’s NLJ, Elspeth Guild and Rebecca Niblock, of Kingsley Napley, look at these suggestions from a legal (and practical) standpoint.

Professor Guild, legal counsel and immigration law specialist, and Niblock, criminal litigation partner, cover border control arrangements in place between France and the UK, including the Sandhurst Agreement which cannot be used because ‘the assumed legal framework on which the agreement was negotiated and which is built into the agreement no longer exists’.

The authors look at the legality of the proposals as well as the experiences of other countries, including with Operation Sophia, covering case law, international law and recent statements by ministers.

Issue: 7965 / Categories: Legal News , Immigration & asylum
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MOVERS & SHAKERS

Gardner Leader—Charlotte Botham & Belinda Sinnott

Gardner Leader—Charlotte Botham & Belinda Sinnott

Law firm strengthens real estate team with two new partners

DR Solicitors—Sarah Cook

DR Solicitors—Sarah Cook

DR Solicitors strengthens primary care expertise with appointment of legal director

Womble Bond Dickinson—David Varney

Womble Bond Dickinson—David Varney

Womble Bond Dickinson appoints David Varney to strengthen digital practice

NEWS
A deputy costs judge correctly exercised his discretion to allow late service rather than strike out the point of dispute, the Court of Appeal has held
Prince Harry, Baroness Doreen Lawrence and five others have lost their case against the publisher of the Daily Mail, Mail on Sunday and MailOnline, in Various Claimants v Associated Newspapers [2026] EWHC 1637 (KB)
Public confidence in the justice system is being undermined by a lack of accessible, useable data, magistrates have warned
The Sentencing Council has launched draft guidelines for facilitation and endangering another person during a sea crossing to the UK
Government proposals to make independent written legal advice a prerequisite for workplace non-disclosure agreements (NDAs) may prove unworkable, according to a senior employment lawyer
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