Skip to content
Search

Latest Stories

Submit Guest Post

Net migration to UK hits record 606,000 in 2022

Rishi Sunak has pledged to reduce legal migration without giving a target

Net migration to UK hits record 606,000 in 2022

Annual net migration to the United Kingdom reached a record high of 606,000 last year, official estimates showed on Thursday (25), heaping pressure on Prime Minister Rishi Sunak who has pledged to bring numbers down.

High levels of legal migration has long dominated Britain's political discourse and the topic was one of the major drivers for the Brexit referendum in 2016.

For more than a decade, successive Conservative-led governments have promised to cut migration - once targeting a net figure of less than 100,000.

But data from the Office for National Statistics published on Thursday showed a net 606,000 people came to Britain in the year ending December 2022. Previous data covering the year ending June 2022 had shown a net figure of 504,000.

The leaders of the Brexit campaign had argued that leaving the European Union would give Britain greater control of its borders and many who voted to leave cited high migration and the pressure they said that put on public services as a factor in their decision.

But in recent years, Britain has opened visa schemes for people in Ukraine and former colony Hong Kong, while companies in sectors such as engineering, construction and catering have urged the government to allow them to hire international staff.

Net migration to Britain in 2015, the year before the referendum, was 329,000.

Sunak has pledged to reduce legal migration without giving a target. Earlier this week, the government said it would remove the right of some international students to bring family members into the country.

Sunak has also vowed to crack down on illegal migration after tens of thousands of people arrived on small boats across the channel in recent years.

(Reuters)

Add EasternEye As Your Trusted Source
preferred source on google news

More For You

YouTube eating disorder videos

A new study says YouTube continues recommending harmful eating disorder content to teenage users despite tougher UK online safety rules

iStock

A year after UK online safety rules, YouTube still recommends eating disorder videos to teens

  • A study found one in 10 YouTube recommendations to a simulated teenage user promoted harmful eating disorder content.
  • The findings come a year after tougher UK online safety rules came into force.
  • Google says the videos identified in the report have now been removed.

YouTube is still recommending eating disorder-related videos to teenagers despite stricter UK online safety rules introduced a year ago, according to new research that has renewed concerns over how the platform's recommendation algorithm works.

The study, carried out by the Centre for Countering Digital Hate (CCDH), found that one in 10 videos recommended to a simulated 13-year-old girl contained material promoting extreme dieting, "thinspiration" or unhealthy calorie restriction.

Keep ReadingShow less