Thursday 31 January 2019

Information on non-returnable countries

One of the greatest blocks to tackling the injustice of refused asylum seekers unable to be returned home is the absence of any information from the UK Home Office on which countries they are unable to return refused asylum seekers. 

This absence of information is significant. If this information were publicly available, then maybe there might be more public outrage about people who have their financial support terminated but who cannot be returned. It would be far more obvious that any one in this position would be forced into destitution. Information is power, and a lack of any information on non-returnable countries removes any chance of challenging this sad state of injustice. 

I think this information should be publicly available. In the continued absence of such information, I think that concerned Members of Parliament should be asking regular questions to identify the current list of such non-returnable countries. Once we have this information, we can then campaign to ensure that such refused, non returnable asylum seekers are not forced into destitution. 

Wednesday 2 January 2019

The injustice of refused, non-returnable asylum seekers

One of the greatest, but often hidden, humanitarian injustices in the UK from my experience working for both the Refugee Council and the Red Cross is the plight of people who have been refused refugee status but cannot be returned home for logistical reasons.

For example a man from Eritrea, who has fled open-ended military conscription in his country but who has had his asylum application refused; the UK government still cannot return people to Eritrea, as there is no safe and viable route. So he remains in the UK but has his financial support stopped, is evicted from his asylum accommodation and is legally barred from working. But he cannot be returned to Eritrea. How is he meant to survive?

Such people are still human and still here; they are trapped in a nightmare limbo – unable to support themselves legally in the UK but also unable to be returned to their country of origin. They are then open to abuse and exploitation just to try to survive.

Surely no-one should be in this situation in the UK? The recent report by the British Red Cross, Can’t Stay Can’t Go, provides shocking details of this crisis but also some clear solutions to help such people.

Yet despite this crisis there is no recognition or help from the Home Office. The repeated line from Ministers of Governments of all political colours is that no-one should be destitute in the UK. Fine words but clearly not true. People are destitute in the UK – with no money, no job, no home.

There needs to be a concerted push from across civil society in the UK to raise awareness amongst MPs of this humanitarian crisis in our own country to build a cross-party alliance for action on this issue. If some-one is refused refugee status and they cannot be returned home, then their support should not be terminated whilst this situation continues for them. To force them into destitution with no other options available is just cruel – surely as such a wealthy country we can and should do better than this?