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Punishing refugees: a policy quietly dropped? No, it’s still a crime to travel by boat
According to the article below, the government has “quietly dropped” the policy they’ve been boasting about for months as the gold standard way of stopping asylum claims by people who have, in their desperation, crossed the Channel in small boats to get here. Originally, their claims for asylum were going to be heard but, even if they were successful, they would be granted “Group 2” status, get only temporary leave to remain and would soon be deported. Only those with passports or visas, or who had managed to find one of what the government calls its “safe routes” (they are becoming increasingly difficult to detect, even with up-to-date technology) would be given Group 1 status, indefinite leave to remain, the right to family reunification and eventually be able to apply for UK nationality. That was the plan. It was called “differentiation”. People who travelled in unauthorised ways had to be punished.
All this has now been “paused”, there will be no “differentiation”, according to Robert Jenrick, the Immigration Minister. Now, migrants who arrive on boats and get their asylum claims granted will get “the same conditions” as the ones with passports or visas, etc. Instead of being punished for travelling on a small boat across dangerous waters, Group 2 asylum seekers will be “aligned with Group 1”. Why the pause? The government claims it will speed up the processing of the backlog of 50,000 people who have been waiting since June 2022 for their cases to be decided. These include 15,000 from countries such as Afghanistan and Sudan, who are more likely to have their claims accepted and will now be processed through questionnaires rather than interviews.
But whatever the reason, Enver Solomon (Executive Director of the Refugee Council) is understandably relieved and has expressed agreement with the move: “It’s the right decision”, he said, “to pause the differentiation policy that treats refugees based on how they got to the UK rather than on their need for protection.”
But to leave it there, of course, would be to rejoice too soon, and the Refugee Council knows that. A pause is just that. A pause. And a Home Office spokesperson has already warned us that the Illegal Migration Bill, which is currently making its way through parliament, will definitely not be paused. Instead, the spokesperson reminded us, it will “make sure that people who come here illegally won’t have their asylum claim considered in the UK and instead can be detained and swiftly removed.”
That’s the policy. None of the politicians can stop it. Most of them don’t want to. The Labour Party is refusing to say whether it will repeal the Act in government. That means it won’t. Only the pressure of a mass movement against this cruel policy will get rid of it.
Can we build one?
Here’s a petition: https://petition.parliament.uk/petitions/634311
The Guardian article:
No repeal, no vote
I’ve just noticed that this year marks a kind of grim anniversary, one that we might want to forget. Just a decade ago, in 2013, Home Secretary Theresa May devised what would become the Immigration Act 2014 and explained its purpose in the following way:
“Most people will say it can’t be fair for people who have no right to be here in the UK to continue to exist as everybody else does with bank accounts, with driving licences and with access to rented accommodation. We are going to be changing that because we don’t think that is fair.”
She wanted to “create a really hostile environment” for illegal migrants: “What we don’t want”, she said, “is a situation where people think that they can come here and overstay because they’re able to access everything they need.”
The Act reduced migrants’ rights, including rights of appeal against deportation. It introduced a “deport first, appeal later” policy for people regarded as being at “no risk of serious irreversible harm” if returned to their country of origin: such judgments, made by caseworkers or Secretaries of State, are notoriously unreliable and dangerous. May’s legislation and her language were in line with a long-standing and nasty Tory approach to asylum and immigration. Her comments were reminiscent of a previous Home Secretary’s remarks, which referred specifically to asylum seekers: in 1995 Michael Howard had declared that the UK was seen as
“a very attractive destination because of the ease with which people can get access to jobs and to benefits. And while, for instance, the number of asylum seekers for the rest of Europe are falling the number in this country are increasing [and] only a tiny proportion of them are genuine refugees.”
Likewise, Social Security Secretary Peter Lilley told the Tory Party Conference in the same year:
“Genuine political refugees are few. The trouble is our system almost invites people to claim asylum to gain British benefits. That can’t be right – and I’m going to stop it. Britain should be a safe haven, not a soft touch.”
The hostile environment led to the Windrush scandal, in which long-standing UK citizens were told they had no such status and were deported to countries they knew nothing about. Some died as a result of the treatment they received at the hands of the woman who now, bizarrely, claims to defend the rights of smuggled children against the provisions of the latest two bits of Tory legislation to abuse, detain and deport some of the most vulnerable and desperate people in the world.
The new laws that have now been brought in by the Sunak government (the Nationality & Borders Act and the Illegal Immigration Act) are harsher and more cruel than anything even Theresa May dreamt of. The rhetoric that goes with them is nastier and more dangerous. We need to find ways of supporting victims of these policies. And the least we can do is put pressure on Labour MPs and, later, candidates in the 2024 general election, to promise to repeal the Tory Acts if Labour wins the election. Tell them: No repeal, no vote.
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So you’re a Group 2 refugee, are you?
This is the third blog in the series on the UK’s Nationality and Borders Act 2022
The first thing to note if you are a Group 2 refugee is that you are a temporary person: “Temporary protection status will be for a temporary period, no longer than 30 months …” (Policy Statement, p. 20, see link below). Once that period is over, you will be protected from absolutely nothing. In Patel’s impersonal language, “individuals will be reassessed for return to their country of origin or removal to another safe country” (ibid.).
Three main problems arise immediately. The first is that it may not be safe to send you back to your own country. The UK government will argue that, since your claim of persecution has been rejected, returning you to your own country will not put you in danger. But, as we have seen, the Home Office’s decision-making is open to question and we will see in later blogs that in any case its knowledge of countries of origin is often inaccurate or out of date. So your safety is far from 100% certain. Moreover, there are plenty of examples where governments, especially if the Home Office has informed them of an asylum seeker’s return, punish them once they get back, and the UK government does not check on the welfare of the people it returns. Labour Immigration Minister Baroness Scotland told the House of Lords in 2006:
Where we refuse a claim and the Asylum and Immigration Tribunal dismisses any appeal we … consider that it is safe for that individual to return. This is one of the reasons why the Home Office does not routinely monitor the treatment of individuals once removed from the UK (cited Mouncer, B. (2010), Dealt with on their Merits?, p. 98).
The second problem is that so far Rwanda is the only country to agree to take asylum seekers passed on to them by the UK, and we don’t know if they will include the UK’s temporarily protected refugees, how they would be treated if they were included (settled there or removed somewhere else?), let alone whether there will be agreements in the future between the UK and other countries.
Thirdly, temporary protection status also means “family reunion rights will be restricted and there will be no recourse to public funds except in cases of destitution” (Policy Statement, p. 20). In practice this must mean that family reunion rights will be defunct in practice (for who would want to bring their family over for a maximum of 30 months, only to be deported to some unknown destination after that, possibly in a state of near-destitution?). But even “restricting” the right to family life surely breaches the spirit of the Refugee Convention, if not the letter. For although there is no specific reference to family reunification in the Refugee Convention, the Conference that adopted that Convention passed a strongly worded recommendation urging governments “to take the necessary measures for the protection of the refugee’s family, especially with a view to ensuring that the unity of the family is maintained” (The Right to Family Life and Family Unity of Refugees, etc., p. 9, para. 2.1.4: https://www.unhcr.org/5a8c40ba1.pdf). Jastram and Newland argue that “Recognition as a refugee gives rise to a prima facie reason to admit the refugee’s close family members to the country of asylum.” (Jastram, K. & Newland, K., Family Unity and Refugee Protection, p. 581: http://refworld.org). They give the same reason: “Reunification in a country of asylum is the only way to assure the right to family unity for refugees, who cannot by definition return to their country of origin.” This has been accepted by most signatories to the Refugee Convention ever since its inception.
The Home Office has described another scenario. In its Explanatory Notes it says that “individuals may be eligible to apply for long residency settlement after 10 years if the necessary requirements are met.” (Explanatory Notes, p.6, para 19). It doesn’t specify who these individuals might be or explain the contradiction between the 10-year period envisaged in this scheme and Patel’s firmly limited protection period of “no more than 30 months”. But with no basis in international law for the creation of Group 2 refugee status, the deportation of recognised refugees, whether after 30 months or 10 years, clearly breaches the Refugee Convention, Article 32: “The Contracting States shall not expel a refugee lawfully in their territory save on grounds of national security or public order.”
Finally, we have seen that if you are given Group 2 status, with its temporary protection, you will have “no recourse to public funds except in the case of destitution” (Policy Statement, p. 20). However, for UNHCR, a refugee is a refugee regardless of the notion of temporary protection or the allocation of any “Group 2” status. UNHCR is clear that a “Group 2 refugee” is entitled to “public relief and assistance on the same terms as nationals”, as laid down in Article 23 of the Refugee Convention (UNHCR Comments on the New Plan, para. 45; Refugee Convention, Art. 23). A ban on such benefits must surely be a breach of the Convention.
Policy Statement:
Out of sight, out of mind: the fate planned for refugees
Discreet talks with the government in Tirana to establish an asylum centre are under way. After a series of frustrations in talks with other countries to host migrants, cabinet hopes of a deal with Albania are growing (The Times, “Migrants to be held in Albania”, 18 November 2021).
Abstaining is not an option – Labour must reject Patel’s Bill
I’ve written to Labour’s Shadow Home Secretary, Nick Thomas-Symonds, and my local MP, Emma Hardy, asking them to make sure that Labour votes against Priti Patel’s new asylum Bill.
Scrutiny of the Nationality and Borders Bill begins tomorrow (19 July). It is of particular interest to me because of my earlier research at Hull University on the treatment of asylum seekers. My particular concern today is that Labour should give no credibility to the Bill. In particular Labour shouldn’t abstain at any point on the grounds that “we understand voters’ concerns”. Labour did this on the Welfare Bill in 2015 and the front bench tried to do it on the Immigration and Social Security Bill in, I think, 2017. But it is time to stand up for a few principles now and not just run scared. The current Bill is the worst Bill of its kind that I can remember and it will do untold harm to people from the moment it becomes law. Labour should have no truck with it from day 1.
I’ve looked at the Bill itself now, so I thought I’d make some preliminary comments. I will focus on Part 2, which is about asylum, but for now I will only mention a couple of points.
Section 10 is unacceptable from the outset: it immediately creates two groups of refugees. Group 1 refugees are legal; Group 2 refugees are not. They are “unlawful”. What makes them unlawful is, according to s.10 (4), because “a person’s entry into or presence in the United Kingdom is unlawful if they require leave to enter or remain and do not have it.” This new definition of “unlawful” makes the vast majority of asylum seekers illegal. The Bill achieves this end, in part, because it creates an entirely new offence. According to s.37(2), (C1), a person who
“(a) requires entry clearance under the immigration rules, and
(b) knowingly arrives in the United Kingdom without a valid entry
clearance,
commits an offence.”
Plus, according to s. 37 (3):
“In proceedings for an offence under subsection (C1) above of
arriving in the United Kingdom without a valid entry
clearance … (b) proof that a person had a valid entry clearance is to lie on the defence.”
This offence of “arriving in the UK” is a new offence, created by this Bill. According to criminal defence barrister Aneurin Brewer, the current situation is that
“those who merely arrive, immediately claim asylum and are as a result admitted to the UK while their asylum claim is processed have not entered the UK illegally.” https://www.freemovement.org.uk/prosecutions-for-assisting-unlawful-immigration-in-small-boats-cases-the-key-to-acquittal/
If this Bill is passed, they will have done so and thus, although the Bill doesn’t breach Convention Article 31 (1) according to Patel’s narrow and restrictive interpretation, it certainly ignores the spirit of UNHCR recommendations on applying a “flexible and liberal” approach and on giving “the benefit of the doubt”.
Patel is legally entitled to do this. It may be worth bearing in mind that the Refugee Convention is not a perfect instrument for protecting refugees. Its final form was the result of a deal. Every state wanted to limit its obligations to give protection to refugees. So the Convention and UNHCR’s Guidelines, despite talk of liberality and benefit of doubt, provided them with caveats and ways of avoiding their responsibilities. One example of this is Article 31(1). While it is generally interpreted as prohibiting governments from imposing any penalties on asylum seekers who arrive without passports or other travel documents, governments generally do impose penalties because the article talks of asylum seekers who come “directly” from the country of their persecution and refers to illegal entry. The word “directly” can be interpreted to mean that penalties can be imposed if the asylum seeker comes to the UK and passes through another “safe” country where, it is always assumed, they could have claimed asylum. This interpretation of the word “directly” was probably the reason why the Dublin Convention, now not applicable after Brexit, was not regarded as a contravention of the Refugee Convention. one of the things Patel is proud of doing in this Bill is making this requirement part of UK law now, thus dealing with the “problem” of the disappearance of the Dublin Convention after Brexit.
So what I’m saying is that, in principle, the Convention seems to establish the primacy of refugee protection, but in its detail and in practice it has proved to be ambiguous and open to a variety of interpretations. UNHCR “advocates that governments adopt a rapid, flexible and liberal process” when dealing with asylum applicants because it recognises “how difficult it often is to document persecution”. However, its interpretation of the Convention contradicts this stance. In its definition of a refugee, the Convention’s reference to persecution “for reasons of race, religion, nationality, membership of a particular social group or political opinion” suggests the possibility of group persecution and a collective refugee experience. But, when interpreted by UNHCR, the definition turns out to be based on a concept of persecution in which the burden of proof falls on the individual asylum seeker. Thus people “who apply for refugee status normally need to establish individually that their fear of persecution is well-founded”, i.e. they must provide evidence that it is not just their social group, members of their political party or people who share their religion or ethnicity who are in danger but themselves as individuals. I have sat in a good few solicitors’ offices listening to them explaining to their clients how their letters, newspaper reports, and their photographs are absolutely not proof. A “flexible and liberal process” becomes less likely as governments demand this rigorous standard of proof. To put the burden of proof on refugees is to consider them guilty until proved innocent.
But Patel is clearly entitled to do what she’s trying to do here. She can invent laws and move the goalposts, she can choose only to follow the UNHCR advice that suits her and ignore the rest. But I think Labour should do its best to stop her. It should, if it can’t eliminate all her hostile purposes from the Bill, vote against the whole shebang and campaign loudly against it from the start. It should never abstain. Not just because of the Refugee Convention, important though that is. But because of the principle of refugee protection and the defence of human rights.
CHANGING THE ASYLUM SYSTEM: HOW NOT TO “SUPPORT THE MOST VULNERABLE”
Home Secretary Priti Patel has announced an overhaul of the UK asylum system, which she says is “broken”. She says that when she’s finished her review the system will be “faster and fairer”. She is not the first Secretary of State to announce such a reform of the system and not the first to use that kind of language. In 1999, Labour’s Jack Straw announced that after his review the system would be “fairer, faster, firmer”.[1] Before him, Social Security Secretary Peter Lilley told the Tory Party Conference in 1995:
“Genuine political refugees are few. The trouble is our system almost invites people to claim asylum to gain British benefits. That can‘t be right – and I‘m going to stop it. Britain should be a safe haven, not a soft touch.”[2]
In 2006, Labour Home Secretary John Reid described the immigration system as “unfit for purpose”, “dysfunctional” and probably needing “wholesale transformation”.[3] Now, after more than a decade of Tory government, Patel is at it again. And as she does it, we will see that she shares the hostility to asylum seekers shown by Lilley, which he in turn shared with Tory Home secretary Michael Howard, who declared in 1995 that the UK
“is seen as a very attractive destination because of the ease with which people can get access to jobs and to benefits. And while, for instance, the number of asylum seekers for the rest of Europe are falling the number in this country are increasing [and] only a tiny proportion of them are genuine refugees.”[4]
To cite her predecessors is to suggest that her proposals are not particularly new. Yet their post-Brexit context has given them extra traction. The referendum campaigns to leave the EU (both the official campaign, Vote Leave, and the unofficial campaign, Leave.EU) argued their case on the basis of democracy. Boris Johnson claimed that the EU had become “ever more centralizing, interfering and anti-democratic … The independence of this country is being seriously compromised. It is this fundamental democratic problem – this erosion of democracy – that brings me into this fight.”[5] Thus we would be able to “take back control” of several aspects of our affairs, e.g. our laws, our justice system, our waters – but notably our borders. Both campaigns wanted to control migrants from the EU, but Leave.EU in particular (which was fronted by UKIP’s Nigel Farage) quickly extended this demand to all immigration, and Leave.EU’s “Breaking Point” poster, which depicted refugees from the Middle East in a vast queue at Europe’s borders, made the point with the slogan displayed on the poster: “We must break free of the EU and take back control”. Migrants were depicted (wherever they came from) as an economic threat to the working class and a security threat (through terrorism) to the country as a whole.[6] Perhaps not surprisingly, in the four weeks following the referendum result, there were 6,000 racist hate crimes recorded by the police. And in cases of verbal abuse there was evidence of how Brexit was thought by some to mean getting rid of all immigrants:
“A Sikh radiographer recounted how a patient asked, “Shouldn’t you be on a plane back to Pakistan? We voted you out.” In 51 per cent of the incidents, perpetrators referred specifically to the referendum in their abuse, with the most commonly involved phrases including ‘Go home’ (74 stories), ‘Leave’ (80 stories), ‘Fuck off’ (45 stories). These were followed up by statements such as ‘We voted you out’, ‘We’re out of the EU now, we can get rid of your lot’, ‘When are you going home?’ ‘Shouldn’t you be packing your bags?’ And then, in August 2016, six teenage boys were arrested in Harlow, Essex, for a brutal street attack on an Eastern European migrant after he was heard speaking Polish in the street. The man subsequently died. What is striking about this wave of racist violence was the way its perpetrators made little attempt to distinguish between black and brown citizens and white European migrants – in their eyes, they were all outsiders.”[7]
Back in Westminster, once the government of Boris Johnson had “got Brexit done”, it began to focus on “taking back control of our borders”.
How did you get here?
One of Patel’s key proposals is that people seeking protection as refugees will have their claims assessed based on how they arrived in the UK. According to the Home Office, the question of whether asylum seekers enter the UK via another safe country such as France will, “for the first time”, “have an impact” on how their claims are dealt with. However, such a measure could find itself in breach of the Refugee Convention signed by the UK. According to the Convention, an asylum claim should be assessed on the basis that the asylum seeker is someone who,
“owing to well-founded fear of being persecuted for reasons of race, religion, nationality, membership of a particular social group or political opinion, is outside the country of his nationality and is unable or, owing to such fear, is unwilling to avail himself of the protection of that country; or who, not having a nationality and being outside the country of his former habitual residence as a result of such events, is unable or, owing to such fear, is unwilling to return to it.”[8]
There’s nothing there about how you arrive or the route you take. You just need to have been persecuted or be living in fear of persecution. On the face of it, Patel’s proposal looks like a breach of the Refugee Convention. But then it always did. For this is not “the first time” that such a regulation has been applied.
Dublin Convention 1990
The Dublin Convention specified that an asylum application must be made in the first EU country of arrival. If you applied in the UK, for example, but you had passed through France, your asylum claim could be refused or you could be sent back to France to be dealt with. It was no defence to explain that you were in the hands of a courier and had no control over your destination; that you had friends or relatives in the UK but did not know anybody in France; that you had some knowledge of English but not of French. Further, under the Dublin Convention, if your application was refused in one EU country it would automatically be refused in all others. This, however, goes against the usual interpretation of the Refugee Convention, i.e. that it requires every signatory state to consider all applications for asylum made on its territory.[9]
But this is all in the past for the UK: now we’ve left the EU, we can no longer use the Dublin Convention to get rid of unwanted asylum seekers. Hence the new proposal, and Patel claims the UK is negotiating new arrangements to overcome this inconvenience. But no agreement has so far been reached. In any case, Patel’s new proposal, like the Dublin Convention rules themselves, sits awkwardly with the Refugee Convention’s Article 1.2, quoted above, and also seems questionable on other legal grounds. The Convention, in Article 31.1, prescribes limits on what governments can do:
“The Contracting States shall not impose penalties, on account of their illegal entry or presence, on refugees who, coming directly from a territory where their life or freedom was threatened in the sense of article 1, enter or are present in their territory without authorization, provided they present themselves without delay to the authorities and show good cause for their illegal entry or presence.”
According to the BBC’s Home and Legal correspondent Dominic Casciani, “Official sources say Ms Patel’s restrictions would be legally possible because asylum seekers are not allowed to go ‘shopping’ for the best destination.”[10] We will come to shopping expeditions later, but Article 31.1 does seem to provide a basis for a legal challenge.
“Illegality”
In spite of this, Patel defends her proposal with the language of law and order, of “illegal” and “legal” travel. The Home Office says that “asylum seekers fleeing persecution or violence and coming to the UK via the ‘legal resettlement’ route from countries such as Syria and Iran would straightaway get permission to remain in the UK indefinitely.”[11] Apart from this limited group, everyone else is apparently “illegal”. But most asylum seekers are not handpicked by the UK government; they flee from many different countries, for many different and complex reasons, sometimes planning their flight, sometimes on the spur of the moment. They may or may not have passports, they may have obtained false passports. They may use ordinary means of transport or they may, in desperation, seek the help of people smugglers. In the case of the smugglers, Patel rightly regards them as illegal, but she then extends that illegality to the asylum seekers they exploit: under the new plans, anyone who pays criminal gangs to bring them to the UK would “only ever receive temporary permission to remain and would be regularly assessed for removal from the UK.”[12] This unjust punishment of the victims of illegal traffickers, however, might be a breach of Article 31.2 of the Refugee Convention:
“The Contracting States shall not apply to the movements of such refugees restrictions other than those which are necessary and such restrictions shall only be applied until their status in the country is regularized or they obtain admission into another country. The Contracting States shall allow such refugees a reasonable period and all the necessary facilities to obtain admission into another country.”
The idea of a “legal settlement scheme” is not new either. When such a scheme was proposed for the EU in 2001 by the UK’s Labour Home Secretary Jack Straw, it caused worries. Human Rights Watch argued that “to set quotas of refugees that European countries would accept from specific trouble spots, while insisting that the rest find protection in the region from which they come”, would “seriously compromise the security of refugees”, many of whom “are simply not able to find safety in neighbouring countries in their region of origin”. Such a scheme would exclude people who fled when they had to, often precipitately, most without choice, and many without knowledge of their destination.[13] And so it has proved.
Choice bugs Ms Patel. Having defined “illegality” and “legality” to suit herself, she declares:
“If you illegally enter the UK via a safe country in which you could have claimed asylum, you are not seeking refuge from imminent peril, as is the intended purpose of the asylum system, but are picking the UK as a preferred destination over others.”
As we saw earlier, there are several reasons why a refugee might want to go to a particular country. They may have relatives or friends only in that country; they may have knowledge of its language but not the language of another country (English rather than French, for example, or the other way round); some will have heard much about countries that are democratic countries and may want one of them to be their destination for that reason. A young Kurd celebrating the Kurdish new year in north London told me, “I come here because England democracy country.” All these are valid reasons to try to reach a particular country, and should not be ridiculed as “asylum shopping”. But asylum seekers who are smuggled often don’t know their destination, and simply go where the lorry or the boat is taking them. They should not be stigmatised as criminals.
Agenda of Disbelief
The assumption, without evidence and before any questions have been asked, that an asylum seeker is, in Patel’s words, “not seeking refuge from imminent peril” is part of what has been called an “agenda of disbelief” about refugees that has been adopted by governments for decades.[14] It has often been included in Acts of Parliament. So the Asylum and Immigration (Treatment of Claimants) Act 2004 gave the green light for asylum caseworkers to raise what were called “credibility” issues. These included:
- failure to produce a valid passport (s. 8 (3) (a));
- production of an invalid passport as if it were valid (s. 8 (3) (b));
- destruction or disposal of a passport (s. 8 (3) (c));
- “failure … to answer a question asked by a deciding authority” (s. 8 (3) (e)), e.g. a caseworker;
- failure to claim asylum when passing through a “safe” country (s.8 (4)).[15]
Yet raising these issues as problems of credibility might breach Article 31.1 of the Refugee Convention. We’ve discussed the “failure” to claim asylum in a safe country. Patel’s proposals imply that caseworkers will continue to raise the other “credibility” issues despite their questionable legality under the Refugee Convention. We will look at the “failure” to produce a valid passport” together with the “destruction or disposal of a passport”.
The offence of entering the UK without a passport was introduced by the 2004 Act, after a period of hostile talk from the government about asylum seekers, led by Labour Home Secretary David Blunkett, and taken up by the tabloid press. One of the most common – and true – explanations for the absence of a passport is that the agent who supplied it demanded the passport back before the end of the journey, typically in the case of a regular flight, before landing. Traffickers take back the passports to avoid detection of their routes and methods.[16] Blunkett claimed that this explanation was not true. Asylum seekers “destroy” their passports, he declared, because “traffickers tell them it’s their best chance of staying in the UK – by making fraudulent claims and making it difficult to remove them if their claims fail.” In line with this philosophy, section 2 laid down that asylum seekers who arrive without passports must “prove that they have a reasonable excuse” for not having one (s. 2 (4) (c)) and section 8 specifically requires the caseworker to raise it as a credibility issue. However, obeying the agent‘s instructions is not counted as a “reasonable excuse” for destroying the passport unless you can show that “in the circumstances of the case it is unreasonable to expect non-compliance with the instructions or advice” (s. 2 (7) (b)). The official Home Office guidance (the Asylum Policy Instructions (API)) on credibility[17] stipulates that this “excuse” will be counted as reasonable only in “exceptional situations”, such as in the case of “unaccompanied minors, the very elderly or … people with mental disabilities”, or if “a document was destroyed or disposed of as a direct result of force, threats or intimidation, e.g. where an individual was forced at knife-point to give a document to someone else.” [18] When doing my PhD research on the treatment of asylum seekers, I never met anyone who offered such an extreme explanation: everyone I talked to who travelled with a false passport on a regular flight in the company of their agent felt obliged to give them up when the agent demanded it. One came with his family from Eritrea. His wife told her caseworker: “The passport I had was Sudanese but the agent took it away.” The agent of another took her passport before the plane landed and then he disappeared. Yet another’s agent took her passport during the flight, disembarked when the plane landed at Rome and left her to travel on to Heathrow alone. There is, in fact, no need for “knife-point” threats: asylum seekers hand their passports back because, dependent as they are on their agents, they feel they have no choice but to obey.
Temptation to abuse
The pressure on caseworkers to raise these questions may lead to misrepresentation (deliberate or accidental) or to abuse. This happened in Ervin’s case.[19] His application for asylum was refused and his caseworker set out his reasons in the refusal letter:
“In your statement you claim that you travelled to Turkey then to the United Kingdom concealed in the back of a lorry. You would therefore have travelled through a number of European countries which are signatories to the 1951 United Nations Convention, and are therefore safe countries that are obliged to consider any asylum applications made upon their territory. There is no reason to believe that these countries would not fulfil their [Convention] obligations … The fact that you failed to claim asylum [in one of these countries] therefore further reduces your credibility.”
Unfortunately, the “fact” on which this conclusion is based is no fact at all. Ervin and his wife did not “travel to Turkey then to the United Kingdom concealed in the back of a lorry”. They arrived by plane. In his witness statement (read by the caseworker), Ervin said:
“We entered the plane with passports provided by the agent. The passports were taken away from us by the agent’s representative at the Transit Hall of Stansted Airport, in the United Kingdom.”
The caseworker knew that Ervin had arrived by plane, not only from his witness statement and the record of his screening interview but also from his main asylum interview conducted by the caseworker himself. At best the caseworker’s accusation arose from a careless disregard for the details of Ervin’s account. At worst, it derived from an eagerness to push “credibility” issues as hard as possible under pressure from his managers and his legal obligation under the 2004 Act to raise them. Nevertheless, in this case the caseworker seemed intent on fitting up Ervin for refusal. A major part of Ervin’s claim for asylum was based on his experience of detention and torture in Iran. His caseworker relentlessly set about demolishing that claim:
“You say that whilst in detention, you were beaten, kicked, and “a crazy person” burnt you with a cigarette. It is unclear whether the crazy person was a member of the security forces, or another detainee.”
It is perfectly clear in Ervin’s account that the “crazy person” was a member of the security forces. Ervin is telling a story of abuse by the authorities in the detention centre. It is clear that when he claimed that he had been “beaten up, kicked” and that “my face was swollen, with blood pouring out of my nose” he was accusing the staff at the centre. When he claimed that he heard “the cry of others who were being tortured in other rooms” and that he “could hear the cry and begging of other prisoners” he meant they were being tortured by the guards. When he said, “At the end a crazy person came and put his cigarette out on my hand” the culprit was clearly a guard, not “another detainee”.
Secondly, the caseworker writes:
“When I asked you how often you were beaten (Q36) [Question 36], initially you were unable to say, then you responded “4-5 hours”, during which you sustained a bloody nose, and eye.”
The impression given is of a man who was uncertain of the story he wanted to tell, finally inventing an implausible four- to five-hour beating, from which he emerged with no more than “a bloody nose, and eye”. However, virtually none of the interviewer’s account is true. Ervin was perfectly able to answer Question 36, and he did so immediately and appropriately – but it was not the question the caseworker claimed it to be:
“Q36: Could you tell me how you were beaten?
A: Some of them punched me and some kicked me. My nose was bleeding and my eye. At the end a crazy person came and put his cigarette out on my hand …”
Ervin then replied immediately to Question 37, which did ask how often he had been beaten. However, he did not claim to have been beaten for four or five hours but to have been beaten four or five times:
“Q37: Could you tell me how often you were beaten?
A: I did not know from the day to the night. I would say about four or five times but I don‘t know if it was day or night.”
This can be read as a misrepresentation of Ervin’s account of his detention or as the product of the interviewer’s poor memory and his misreading of the interview record. But Ervin’s claim to have been tortured was an important part of his claim for asylum and should have been considered carefully, at length and in detail. Instead, his experience was discounted in a mish-mash of inaccuracies and unsustainable accusations.
The pressure to make a credibility issue stick was also seen in Daryan’s case. He fled from Iraq when Saddam was persecuting the Kurds. During the asylum process he got some dates confused. His caseworker jumped at the opportunity and used this as a reason for refusing his asylum claim:
“You claimed [in your written witness statement] you were arrested on 20 May 1995 … At interview, when you were asked the date you were arrested you stated you were arrested on 20 November 1995, you then corrected this and claimed you were arrested on 20 May 1995 and allege you were released on 10 November 1995. When asked what happened on 20 November 1995, you said you made a mistake, you stated it was the date your brother was killed, but not the year.”
There was nothing to cause suspicion here – Daryan made a mistake about dates, then immediately corrected himself. During his interview with me, he explained:
“I had said the wrong date: “What date your brother die?” Yeah? Because … I been shot with my brother. After three days my brother die in hospital. They ask me “Which day you and your brother been shoot?” And “Which day your brother die?” And “Which day you run?” “Which day you leave your country.” Is too many days, and I don’t remember after four years all these dates.”
These examples show that the UK asylum system, as it has existed over several decades, lends itself to abuse – not by asylum seekers but by Home Secretaries and their officials determined to wrongfoot and criminalise them. Under the new proposals, powered by Brexit, this will only get worse.
Supporting the vulnerable
Setting out the plans to MPs, Patel said the government would introduce a “faster and fairer” system that would “better support the most vulnerable”. This false claim is nothing new. Back in 2001, Jack Straw expressed similar goodwill towards refugees. His aim was to “make it easier for genuine refugees to access the protection regimes of Europe and other Western States, for example by making their journeys less hazardous.”[20] According to Straw’s plan, an agreed number of refugees – and possibly others in need of protection – would be identified in their own regions and brought to the EU for resettlement. It would mean funding UN refugee camps in regions of origin and giving priority to protection in those regions. The result, in the UK, was the Gateway programme. But Straw, like Patel today, only counted the refugees in the camps as “genuine”, and perhaps only some of them. Under the programme, only 1% of the refugee population in the refugee camps concerned were selected. In March/April 2004, 69 people were resettled in Sheffield; in November, 81 people went to Bolton; in 2005, 51 refugees were sent to Sheffield, 84 to Bury and Bolton combined and 115 to Hull and Rochdale.[21] The numbers were low, as Human Rights Watch had feared. The vast majority of refugees, both in the refugee camps and beyond, were unable to access the protection they needed. Similarly, Patel’s tight distinction between “illegal” and “legal” asylum seekers will have the same effect. The handpicked refugees in the “legal resettlement” category will get protection – but inevitably (and by deliberate design) the numbers will be small. Everyone else will be rejected, and Patel uses the same hostile language Straw used. She said the asylum system is clogged up with bogus claims and legal wrangles.[22] In 1997, Straw announced that his aim was to ensure that “there will be less of an incentive for the bogus people to come here.”[23]
Bogus people? There’s a thought.
[1] Fairer, Faster and Firmer – a Modern Approach to Immigration and Asylum (1999), IND, London.
[2] Cited, Mouncer, Bob (2009), Dealt with on their Merits: the treatment of asylum seekers in the UK and France, PhD dissertation, University of Hull, pp. 96-97: https://hydra.hull.ac.uk/resources/hull:2678
[3] BBC News, “Immigration system unfit – Reid”: http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk_politics/5007148.stm”, 23 May 2006.
[4] Cited, Mouncer, Bob (2009), Dealt with on their Merits: the treatment of asylum seekers in the UK and France, PhD dissertation, University of Hull, p. 96: https://hydra.hull.ac.uk/resources/hull:2678
[5] Cited, Virdee, S. & McGeever, B., “Racism, Crisis, Brexit”, in Ethnic and Racial Studies, August 2017, Routledge, London, p. 3.
[6] Ibid., p. 5.
[7] Ibid., p. 7.
[8]Convention relating to the Status of Refugees, Article 1.2.
[9] Mouncer, Bob (2009), Dealt with on their Merits: the treatment of asylum seekers in the UK and France, PhD dissertation, University of Hull, p. 14: https://hydra.hull.ac.uk/resources/hull:2678
[10] BBC News, “Priti Patel pledges overhaul of asylum seeker rules”, 25 March 2021: https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-politics-56500680
[11] Ibid.
[12] Ibid.
[13] Mouncer, Bob (2009), Dealt with on their Merits: the treatment of asylum seekers in the UK and France, PhD dissertation, University of Hull, p. 280: https://hydra.hull.ac.uk/resources/hull:2678
[14] Ensor, J. (2006), “Credibility under the 2004 Immigration Act” in Headleins, Issue 5 (Nov./Dec. 2006), Electronic Immigration Network.
[15] Mouncer, Bob (2009), Dealt with on their Merits: the treatment of asylum seekers in the UK and France, PhD dissertation, University of Hull, p. 156: https://hydra.hull.ac.uk/resources/hull:2678
[16] Webber, F. (2003), “New Deterrent Measures for Asylum Seekers Condemned”, Independent Race and Refugee News Network, Institute of Race Relations, London, October 2003.
[17] API – Credibility (2006), Assessing Credibility in Asylum and Human Rights Claims, BIA, Home Office, London.
[18]Mouncer, Bob (2009), Dealt with on their Merits: the treatment of asylum seekers in the UK and France, PhD dissertation, University of Hull, p. 157: https://hydra.hull.ac.uk/resources/hull:2678
[19] Names in this section are not the real names of the people described. Quotations are from official records of witness statements and Home Office caseworker interviews and refusal letters, as well as asylum-seeker interviews conducted by me.
[20] Mouncer, Bob (2009), Dealt with on their Merits: the treatment of asylum seekers in the UK and France, PhD dissertation, University of Hull, p. 278: https://hydra.hull.ac.uk/resources/hull:2678
[21] Ibid., p. 280.
[22] BBC News, “Priti Patel pledges overhaul of asylum seeker rules”, 25 March 2021: https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-politics-56500680
[23] Mouncer, Bob (2009), Dealt with on their Merits: the treatment of asylum seekers in the UK and France, PhD dissertation, University of Hull, p. 97: https://hydra.hull.ac.uk/resources/hull:2678
Urgent Question
It looks as if the government will legislate early next year for a complete overhaul of the immigration system so that more people can be deported more quickly and so that appeals against refused claims will be reduced to pretty much nil. This was made clear today during an urgent question by former Tory immigration minister Caroline Noakes. She became notorious when she was immigration minister for blocking asylum seekers from her Twitter page when they desperately tried to find out why she hadn’t replied to their letters. But today she was trying to sound horrified when she pointed out that asylum seekers were being put into camps in the UK without running water. But her real point seemed to be that they should be deported straightaway and not be accommodated at all. The reference to the absence of running water was slightly awkward for the immigration minister (a slightly jittery creature whose name, I think, was Phipp), who’d turned up with a line insisting that all accommodation provided was impeccable and in line with legally required standards. He kept repeating this mantra, or rather reading it out carefully, whenever anybody referred to the obvious dilapidation of many parts of what is called the “asylum estate”. But Caroline was no doubt pleased to hear that “in the next six months” a comprehensive overhaul would be given to “our failed immigration and asylum system”. The reforms would ensure that asylum seekers would be required to apply for asylum in other countries like France or Italy, “which are safe countries, civilised countries like ours”, “or indeed”, as one member put it, “like Greece”. If they turn up on our shores, they will be speedily dispatched back to the first European country they allegedly passed through (over, or even under) so that they can apply there. The reforms would likewise ensure that smuggling gangs would no longer be able to benefit from exploiting vulnerable people (nobody explained why this would be so, and the thought occurred to me that the reforms might make such exploitation more likely). Moreover (and this must have been important because lots of honourable members spoke about this), “greedy lawyers”, described by Sir Edward Leigh as “so-called human rights lawyers”, would no longer be able to “waste taxpayers’ money” on “spurious” appeals against refused asylum applications. Nobody gave an example of this practice.
So it does look as if Labour leader Keir Starmer will be presented next year with this test of his mettle. What will he do? I predict he will whip MPs to abstain in the early stages, put amendments later and, when they’re lost, he will whip MPs to vote for the legislation. That way, he will have “sent messages” to everybody, but at the end of the day he will have sent the message he most wants to send: that “Labour understands the electorate’s concerns about immigration.”
It’s a wicked world.
No reset for the Home Office
When I worked at the international telephone exchange in London (I’m obviously talking about when there were such things, so in the early 1980s) we had to sign the Official Secrets Act. We signed it when we joined and we signed it when we left. When I left, Mr Ignacek, a divisional supervisor, told me: “You have to sign the Act again.”
“What for?” I asked.
“So you don’t blab!” he said.
“Blab?” I said. “What about?!” (We were only a telephone exchange. I wasn’t John Le Carré.)
“Anything,” Iggy said. “You can’t even tell them the colour of the paint on the bloody walls!”
All that was ridiculous and funny. The story (below) of how the Official Secrets Act is being used today to cover up cruelty and ill-treatment of asylum seekers is not funny at all. It’s shameful. And yes, Priti Patel is overseeing it, no doubt with her trademark enthusiasm for bullying way out in front. But, as I said before (see previous two blogs), abuse of asylum seekers goes back through the decades and was perpetrated by governments of all shades. Why did Labour Home Secretary David Blunkett introduce the policy of separating the children of refused asylum seekers from their parents and putting them in care in order to force their terrified parents to take the family back to their dangerous home country? The Head of Asylum Policy at the Home Office in 2006, Rod McLean, told me it was because he wanted to prove to the tabloid press that he was not a “soft touch” when it came to asylum. When I told MacLean that the Refugee Council had said this policy was “not the mark of a civilised society”, he sighed, shrugged his shoulders and said: “Well, they would say that, wouldn’t they?”
And so it goes on. In our name. We have to do something about it. Get involved in one of the support groups mentioned in the article, send emails to MPs and ministers, raise the issue in your union branch, invent ways of protesting that are safe during the pandemic. We shouldn’t leave people to the non-existent mercy of our politicians and their civil servants.