Channel migrants working as delivery drivers within hours of arriving โ report
Channel migrants are working as fast-food delivery riders within hours of arriving in the UK, according to an investigation by The Sun newspaper.
The newspaper said Deliveroo and Just Eat delivery accounts were being offered to migrants โwithin 10 minutes of askingโ through social media groups.
The Sun said its investigators and undercover reporters had found that migrants staying in asylum hotels across the country were joining dozens of social media groups dedicated to offering food delivery accounts for rent.
According to the newspaperโs investigation, migrants were paying as little as ยฃ40 a week for login details.
Migrants worked 15-hour shifts using their hotels as a base for their bikes, bags and uniforms and could make hundreds of pounds a week with guarantees from account dealers that they would not be caught.
The Sun said an undercover reporter posing as a small-boat arrival from Afghanistan was โquickly flooded with offers from all over the countryโ.
It published photographs alongside the story that it said were of men leaving migrant hotels wearing branded delivery bags on their backs.
On Tuesday, shadow home secretary Chris Philp posted a message on X saying he made an unannounced visit to an asylum hotel last Friday and found โclear evidenceโ of illegal working for Deliveroo, Just Eat and Uber Eats.
In a letter to all three firms, Mr Philp wrote: โThese illegal immigrants are not allowed to work as delivery drivers while their asylum claim is pending, but when I looked in the bike store in the hotel, I saw delivery bags for Deliveroo, Just Eat and Uber Eats on the bikes.โ
He continued: โPlease can you commit to removing any driver โฆ as a courier who does not have the right to work in the UK, including at this hotel site and elsewhere. I would be grateful if you could set out what further specific steps you will take (above what you currently do, which is evidently not working) in relation to this site and more generally to prevent illegal working.โ
He added: โThis is important, as the ability to work illegally is a pull factor for illegal immigration and by allowing this to happen on your platform you are fuelling the illegal immigration crisis.โ
A Downing Street spokesman said border security minister Angela Eagle will meet food delivery companies next week, adding that the Government will not stand for the โracketโ.
He said: โItโs right that spotlight is being shone on this racket. It undermines honest businesses and undercuts local wages, and the British public rightly wonโt stand for it, and neither will this Government.โ
He said the Government has stepped up illegal working arrests and is strengthening the law to confirm immigration status and right to work.
โMinister Eagle is meeting food delivery companies next week, where she will address this issue and to drive further joint working on tackling illegal work.โ
A Just Eat spokesperson said: โJust Eat is committed to being a responsible partner and supporting the local communities we operate in. To uphold this commitment, we set clear standards and requirements for those who deliver on our behalf.
โWe are continuously strengthening our approach to ensure anyone who delivers through Just Eatโs platform has the right to work in the UK.
โLast year, Just Eat introduced a new mechanism requiring couriers to inform us that they are using substitutes and for these substitutes to complete right-to-work checks.
โWe have now rolled out the next phase of substitute checks with enhanced biometric verification. Couriers are randomly prompted to complete a facial recognition test, ensuring the individual using the accountโs facial data matches the right-to-work documentation held on our system. Any couriers who fail these checks are removed from the JET network.
โWe welcomed the Government announcement earlier this year to extend right-to-work checks to all industries to tackle illegal immigration. We continue to work with the Home Office on this matter.โ
Deliveroo and Uber Eats have been approached for comment.
