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Dec 30, 2025

UK Signs Return Agreements With Angola & Namibia, Slaps Visa Sanctions on DR Congo

UK Signs Return Agreements With Angola & Namibia, Slaps Visa Sanctions on DR Congo
The Home Office has secured two new bilateral readmission treaties with Angola and Namibia that will allow immigration officers to deport foreign nationals who have no legal right to remain in Britain within days, rather than months. Under the accords—finalised in late December but published on 29 December—Luanda and Windhoek have agreed to issue emergency travel documents within five working days and to accept group charter flights. The deals form part of Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood’s pledge to make refugee status temporary and to accelerate removals of irregular migrants.

At the same time, the UK has, for the first time, activated visa-penalty powers created by the 2022 Nationality & Borders Act. Priority and fast-track visa services for citizens of the Democratic Republic of the Congo have been withdrawn and senior Congolese officials have lost access to VIP channels, after Kinshasa repeatedly refused to accept deportation flights. Mahmood warned that a full visa suspension could follow if cooperation does not improve.

UK Signs Return Agreements With Angola & Namibia, Slaps Visa Sanctions on DR Congo


Against this backdrop, VisaHQ’s global visa platform can help both individual travellers and corporate mobility teams navigate the shifting UK rules. Its London-based specialists provide up-to-date guidance, document checking and application management—even for nationalities now facing longer processing times—through https://www.visahq.com/united-kingdom/. Staying compliant is easier when experts track every policy change for you.

For multinational employers the development is more than a political headline. Tighter enforcement means that overstayers are more likely to be detected and removed, raising the risk that sponsored work visas are curtailed if migrants fall out of status. HR and global-mobility teams should step up right-to-work audits and remind staff of the importance of timely extensions. Companies moving Angolan and Namibian talent into the UK can expect little day-to-day change, but Congolese business travellers may now face longer processing times and higher fees.

The new, more transactional approach to migration diplomacy is expected to continue in 2026. Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper has instructed UK missions worldwide to prioritise deportation negotiations and is linking trade and aid incentives to cooperation on returns. Since July 2024, the government claims to have removed more than 50,000 people—a 23 per cent year-on-year rise. Mobility managers should monitor the Home Office’s ‘Priority Countries’ list, which could expand rapidly if other states fail to accept their nationals back.
VisaHQ's expert visas and immigration team helps individuals and companies navigate global travel, work, and residency requirements. We handle document preparation, application filings, government agencies coordination, every aspect necessary to ensure fast, compliant, and stress-free approvals.
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