Essex Police and Border Force seize £100k in cash and 80,000 cigarettes in Stansted anti-trafficking sweep
Watchdog finds legal and safeguarding gaps at UK Border Force holding rooms
Dover braces for EES queues as UK holiday traffic peaks
Latest News
Skybus grounds Newquay–Scilly service for rest of summer, citing aircraft and pilot shortage
Skybus has suspended its Newquay–Isles of Scilly operation until the end of August because it lacks spare aircraft and qualified pilots. Passengers will be moved to Land’s End departures, lengthening journeys and raising costs for residents, tourists and local businesses. The move highlights staffing shortfalls in UK regional aviation and creates logistical headaches for corporate travellers needing fast mainland access.
Inspection finds safeguarding failings at Border Force short-term holding sites
The independent borders watchdog says many UK short-term holding facilities still fail basic legal-advice and safeguarding standards, with examples of infants detained for more than 20 hours and staff using Google Translate for interviews. The Home Office has accepted most recommendations but given a lengthy timeline, raising the risk of litigation and reputational damage for corporate immigration stakeholders.
Watchdog finds ‘significant’ legal breaches in UK airport detention suites
An unannounced inspection of 17 Border Force holding rooms found detainees kept for long periods without legal advice or adequate facilities, prompting calls for urgent remedial action. Multinational companies are advised to review arrival documentation for travelling staff to avoid detention-related delays and costs.
Stansted task-force disrupts organised immigration crime and safeguards vulnerable travellers
A joint Essex Police and Border Force operation at Stansted Airport, disclosed on 17 July, has seized £185,000 in cash and 80,000 illicit cigarettes while identifying trafficking victims. The crackdown illustrates how revenue crime intersects with organised immigration offences and may lead to additional scrutiny of arriving passengers.
UK–Switzerland trade deal locks in 90-day visa-free visits for lawyers and other service providers
A new UK–Switzerland free-trade agreement, announced on 17 July, guarantees visa-free short-term business travel for UK lawyers and other professionals and preserves their right to advise on English law in Switzerland. The deal offers long-term certainty for cross-border assignments and could influence future mobility chapters in UK agreements with other non-EU states.
Port of Dover braces for EU Entry-Exit System glitches as summer getaway begins
Software failures mean French police at Dover will register UK travellers for the EU’s new Entry-Exit System by hand this weekend. The port expects its busiest summer traffic since before Covid, raising fears of tailbacks on Kent’s roads and missed ferries. Employers are being urged to brief travellers and build extra time into cross-Channel trips.
Trespass incident disrupts London’s Windrush Line just as holiday exodus begins
A trespass incident on London’s Windrush Line caused early-morning suspensions that rippled into missed flights and freight delays, underscoring the fragility of first-mile links in international mobility chains.
Home Office issues 17 July update to UK sponsor licence register
UKVI’s weekly update to the Register of Licensed Sponsors, published on 17 July, adds 312 employers and removes 70 for non-compliance. The register is essential for firms hiring on Skilled Worker and Global Business Mobility visas, and the latest suspensions highlight tougher enforcement via payroll data matching.
UK updates Spain travel advice amid EES rollout and French rail strikes
The FCDO’s 17 July advisory urges UK travellers to Spain to prepare for EES biometric registration and possible delays crossing France due to strike action. Companies should track assignees’ Schengen days and remind staff of documentation and financial proof requirements.
Port of Dover braces for queues as EU Entry-Exit glitches threaten UK holiday exodus
Dover expects its busiest weekend of the year just as glitches in the EU’s biometric Entry-Exit System resurface. Incomplete software means new e-gates for cars cannot be used, raising the prospect of multi-hour queues for 17-19 July holiday traffic. The disruption could hurt freight reliability and corporate travel schedules and highlights the need for rapid Franco-British coordination before EES and ETIAS are fully enforced.
Met Police set strict route and time limits for 18 July London protest
The Metropolitan Police has ordered Saturday’s National March for Palestine to stick to a set route from Russell Square to Whitehall and finish by 17:30. The 17 July notice signals road closures and Tube station restrictions that will affect business travellers and airport transfers across central London.
Heatwave drives record ‘staycation’, but EU border worries still bite
ITV forecasts a record summer getaway on UK roads as heat and fears of EES queues deter overseas trips. Corporates shifting events to British venues should factor in motorway congestion that could still impact cross-Channel freight and passenger schedules.
Heatwave and EU border fears set stage for busiest UK road getaway since 2022
The RAC expects 14 million leisure journeys on UK roads this weekend – the biggest July getaway since 2022 – as a heatwave and worries over EU border queues push travellers to stay domestic. Heavy traffic could disrupt business logistics and staff movements; employers are urged to build extra travel time and heat-safety measures into duty-of-care plans.
Ryanair warns UK families to brace for long passport queues as EU Entry/Exit System glitches persist
Ryanair has told UK passengers to expect extended passport-control waits at 15 European airports because the EU’s new Entry/Exit System is still plagued by kiosk failures and staffing shortages. The airline urges families to arrive earlier and lobbies Brussels to delay full enforcement until 2027. The alert highlights ongoing post-Brexit frictions at the border and could influence summer travel plans for both tourists and corporate travellers.
Home Office data show 46 % jump in disruptions to organised immigration crime
New Home Office statistics published on 16 July show a 46 % year-on-year rise in operations that disrupted organised immigration crime, with arrests up 74 %. The surge reflects intensified policing of smuggling networks and heralds tougher compliance checks for UK employers and their mobility suppliers.
UK-France ‘one in, one out’ pilot tops 1,100 transfers each way, new stats reveal
Transparency data published on 16 July show that, since last August, 1,117 people have been transferred from France to the UK and 1,087 returned in the opposite direction under the bilateral ‘one in, one out’ Channel scheme. The near-parity lends political support to the pilot but signals continuing, highly managed returns that affect wider immigration processing priorities.
FCDO staff strike kicks off, risking delays to emergency travel documents and overseas services
PCS union members at the Foreign Office launched a strike on 16 July, with additional dates later in the month. The action threatens slower issuance of emergency passports and consular documents that businesses and travelling employees depend on, adding another layer of complexity to summer mobility planning.