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Evening Standard
Evening Standard
Politics
Rachael Burford

Two arrested in east London over migrants 'pretend to be gay' fake visas scam

Officers investigating immigration advisers who allegedly helped asylum seekers pretend to be gay to stay in Britain have arrested two people in east London.

Home Office Immigration Enforcement teams raided addresses in the capital on Wednesday.

A man in his 20s was detained on suspicion of fraud and a woman in her 40s was arrested on suspicion of providing an immigration service contrary to section 91 of the Immigration and Asylum Act, it is understood.

The raids followed a BBC investigation which revealed some migrants whose UK visas were due to expire were being advised to obtain fake evidence that they were gay and would be persecuted if sent back to their country of origin.

The broadcaster secretly filmed an event for LGBT asylum seekers where several migrants told an undercover reporter that most of those attending were not genuinely gay but were obtaining evidence for their claims.

Advisers allegedly charged thousands of pounds to provided fake cover stories and fabricated testimony from partners.

People would then claim to be gay and tell authorities they feared for their lives if forced to return to countries such as Pakistan or Bangladesh.

One undercover reporter was told that once his claim was approved, he could bring his wife over from Pakistan and she could also claim to be a lesbian.

A Home Office spokesman said: "Two suspected sham immigration lawyers have been arrested after they were accused of operating at the heart of a shadow industry that ‘coached’ illegal migrants to pretend they are gay.

"Both suspects are thought to have charged thousands of pounds for a service that advised migrants to fake details of their sexuality to falsely claim asylum in the UK.

"The arrests, led by the Criminal Financial Investigations team, follow record enforcement success in 2025, with organised immigration crime arrests, convictions and asset seizures hitting historic levels. Both suspects remain in custody as the investigation continues."

Home Office minister Mike Tapp attended one of the raids.

He said: “If lawyers, or so-called lawyers, and legal advisers are out there providing this dodgy advice, we’re coming after them...we’ll make those arrests.

“Our asylum system is there for people who are genuinely fleeing persecution and war.”

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