Services company Capita is to be paid up to £40m to find and detain up to 170,000 illegal immigrants who have gone AWOL.

Crucially, Capita will be paid on a payment by results basis. If an immigrant is tracked down and is unable to be deported, Capita won't be paid - though full details have yet to be confirmed.

Bounty hunters

It's also unknown what targets Capita have been set, if any. So far more than 170,000 illegal immigrants who have been denied permission to stay in the UK have gone on the run. These belong to the so-called "migration refusal pool" which has soared by almost 25,000 since the middle of summer.

However, this list doesn't number those who entered the UK illegally or asylum seekers whose appeals have failed. Labour shadow immigration minister Chris Bryant slammed the move, saying that a payment by results arrangement is only any good if the terms are strictly defined first.


Target practice?

"The UK Border Agency has revealed that Capita will get £40 million from the taxpayer if it meets its targets, but UKBA doesn't seem to have any idea of what would constitute a success. In a time of austerity, the UKBA and the Home Secretary should be able to demonstrate that they are providing value for money to the taxpayer."

He adds: "The details of the contract and the tender process should be as transparent as possible; and at the very least, the Chief Executive of the UK Border Agency should be in a position to define what exactly a successful program by Capita would look like."

Mixed results

A similar project handed to Serco, another outsourcer player, saw just 20% of overstayers leave the UK after six months of being found. So if Serco's track record is anything to go by, Capita has their work cut out.

Recent Government outsourcing has a chequered history: the Atos Welfare to Work program has been hugely controversial - Atos carries the £100m government contract to carry out the tests which judge whether claimants of incapacity benefit are fit for work - and the G4S Olympics contract was a well-documented fiasco.

Capita were contacted but could not confirm all details of this story until the contract is officially signed on 1 October.



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