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Protect the Right to Seek Asylum

The New Plan for Immigration is a direct attack on the right to seek asylum. Not only that, but the consultation process that has been put to the public is misleading, confusing and inaccessible; the statement is available in only English and Welsh, excluding people who speak other languages. People only have six weeks to complete it, and to feedback on something which threatens the very basis of sanctuary and protection. Usually consultations like this last at least twelve weeks. 

We have until the 6th of May to provide feedback. If you would like to do this as an individual, click here for Amnesty's helpful guide. If you would like to complete it as an organisation which works with people seeking sanctuary, you can read Asylum Matter's guidance notes here.

Please also sign Refugee Action's Open Letter to complain about the consultation process by clicking here. 

You can read Bristol City of Sanctuary's joint statement on the proposals below:

 
Seeking Sanctuary is a Human Right

 
city of sanctuaryWe have become increasingly concerned at the hostile and dehumanising rhetoric from the Home Office, and the Home Secretary in particular, around people seeking sanctuary. This concern was compounded today with the revelation of new proposals which threaten the right to seek asylum in the United Kingdom.1

The proposals would punish people forced to take overland routes to claim asylum in the UK, deeming them “inadmissible” to the asylum system. They would then be targeted for removal from the UK. If they could not be removed, then they would be given temporary protection with less entitlement to support and family reunion rights. This temporary protection would mean that people would be regularly reassessed for removal, a system which would create a huge burden of uncertainty and fear amongst those seeking sanctuary. The proposals also make reference to the possibility of offshore processing, amending the National Immigration and Asylum Act 2002 to make it possible to move people whilst an asylum claim is pending.

The proposals are a threat to the right to seek asylum, a right enshrined in international law more than half a century ago. Penalising people and threatening their asylum claims based on how they seek asylum contravenes this right, and undermines our history of offering sanctuary to people who need it. 
The policy also creates a dichotomy of deserving and undeserving; those few who are able to come through resettlement schemes versus the majority who are forced to take irregular routes into the country. We wish that people did not have to resort to risking their lives to enter the UK, and have long campaigned for safe and legal routes that take away this need. However, introducing punitive measures against people who are forced to enter through irregular routes is not the answer.

In her speech to the House of Commons, Priti Patel referred to “illegal arrivals.” Language such as this demonises and dehumanises; no one is illegal, and it is a dangerous narrative to pursue. People seek asylum here because of war, persecution and violence; they have fled some of the most unspeakable horrors and should be offered protection, not criminalised.

We agree that the asylum system needs a massive overhaul. In its current state it is ineffective and inhumane; these proposals will only make that worse. Penalising people for seeking sanctuary here through irregular routes is unfair and unjust, especially when there is little other option. The Home Office says that “Britain needs a firm but fair system.” We can assure you, this is anything but fair.

1JCWI have created a useful document to explain the new proposals: https://www.jcwi.org.uk/explained-priti-patels-plans-for-the-immigration-system



 
Posted: Apr 2021