Home Office Ministers were answering questions in the Commons.
Subjects covered included... Refugee Family Reunion Domestic
Violence and Abuse Policing: Protests Settled Status
Sexual Exploitation of Vulnerable Children Knife Crime
Police Numbers Fire Services: Workforce Illegal
Migrants: Employment...Request free
trial
Home Office Ministers were answering questions in the Commons.
Subjects covered included...
To read any of these in greater detail, click on the link or see
below.
Refugee Family Reunion
-
(Cardiff Central)
(Lab)
1. If he will take steps to expand the scope of the refugee
family reunion rules. [905642]
-
The Secretary of State for the Home Department (Sajid
Javid)
The Government’s approach to refugee family reunion has
provided a safe and legal route for more than 25,000
partners and children of those granted protection here in
the last five years. We are listening carefully to calls to
expand family reunion. We are monitoring the progress of
two private Members’ Bills and are actively in discussion
with non-governmental organisations.
-
While adults can sponsor their relatives, under UK rules
separated children have no family reunion rights—not even
to bring their parents to the UK. Every other country in
the EU allows children to sponsor at least their closest
relatives. When will the UK do the same?
-
I understand the concerns of the hon. Lady, who is right to
raise this important matter. As I said a moment ago, we
want to look at the private Members’ Bills and see what
more we can do. On her specific issue about children, there
is a concern that if we allow children to sponsor adults,
whether their parents or others, that might cause harm, in
that people might be incentivised to push children forward
and put them through danger. I hope she understands that we
need to consider such things carefully.
-
Mr (North East Hampshire) (Con)
Is it not critical that we help people at home rather than
incentivising people to trust people traffickers and so
support their illegal activities?
-
My hon. Friend makes a very good point. He will know that
the Government do a lot—more than any other European
Government—to support refugees in conflict zones. With
regards to Syria, for example, the British Government have
so far allocated more than £2 billion.
-
(Glasgow North)
(SNP)
The Home Secretary says he wants to consider the private
Members’ Bills, so is it not about time the Government
brought forward a money resolution so that the Bill in the
name of my hon. Friend the Member for Na h-Eileanan an Iar
(Angus Brendan MacNeil), the Refugees (Family Reunion) (No.
2) Bill, can make progress and we can debate the
Government’s amendments?
-
As I have said, this is an important and sensitive issue
and we want to consider it carefully, but that means it
should not be rushed. We should take the correct time
necessary to consider the Bills.
-
(Taunton Deane)
(Con)
We have two Syrian families living in Taunton Deane. The
local community has gone all out to look after them,
particularly a charity called Christian Help and Action for
Refugees in Somerset and Rev. Rod Corke from St Mary
Magdalene Church, who is leaving us soon to go to Malvern—a
great loss. Will the Home Secretary join me in
congratulating all those who have given up so much time to
look after these needy people?
-
I absolutely join my hon. Friend in commending the work of
her local community in helping refugees, particularly the
group CHARIS. It shows the importance of community
sponsorship, which is something we want to look at more
closely.
-
Ms (Hackney North and Stoke
Newington) (Lab)
The importance of family life ought to unite both sides of
the House, but the current rules break up families, as many
of us see in our own constituency case loads week after
week. The rules are inhumane and in breach of the right to
a family life under article 8 of the European convention on
human rights. It is also unfortunate that legal aid for
some of these applications, which was previously available,
was removed under the coalition in 2013. Labour has pledged
in government to end the breaking up of families under
these rules. Surely the Home Secretary should move faster
to review his current family reunion rules.
-
I say to the right hon. Lady that 25,000 people have been
reunited over the last five years—5,000 a year; I hope she
would agree that that is not an insignificant number. She
says the current rules are inhumane. It is worth reminding
her that they were introduced in 2007 by the previous
Labour Government. Perhaps she should reflect on that. She
talks about legal aid. As she will know, legal aid is under
review by the Ministry of Justice and is something we are
looking at carefully.
Domestic Violence and Abuse
-
(Enfield,
Southgate) (Lab)
2. What the timetable is for bringing forward legislative
proposals on domestic violence and abuse. [905643]
-
The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for the Home
Department (Victoria Atkins)
The Government’s wide-ranging consultation on domestic
abuse closed last Thursday. We are analysing more than
3,200 responses received from survivors of domestic abuse,
frontline professionals, experts from the domestic abuse
sector and academics. I am grateful to everyone who took
the time to respond. As announced in the Queen’s Speech,
the Government remain committed to bringing forward a draft
Bill this Session.
-
The previous Chancellor announced that domestic violence
services would be among the beneficiaries of the tampon tax
and would receive an additional dedicated £10 million a
year, but this amount remains inadequate for services
already hard hit by successive cuts since 2010. Will the
Government set out a long-term funding strategy for
domestic violence and rape crisis services?
-
I am grateful to the hon. Gentleman; I know he has taken an
interest in this matter. The Government have committed £20
million specifically to domestic abuse accommodation. It is
supporting 80 areas, creating 2,200 new bed spaces and
supporting 19,000 victims of domestic abuse. The Ministry
of Housing, Communities and Local Government is also
conducting an audit of services. Between that audit and the
consultation responses, we will ensure that we have a
service that supports victims of domestic abuse.
-
Mr Speaker
Congratulating him on his knighthood, I call the right hon.
Member for Bexleyheath and Crayford (Sir David Evennett).
-
Sir (Bexleyheath and
Crayford) (Con)
Thank you, Mr Speaker. Can my hon. Friend confirm that the
first ever statutory definition of domestic abuse will
recognise that it is not just physical, but can take many
different forms—psychological, sexual, economic and
emotional—all of which should be considered?
-
I echo your congratulations to my right hon. Friend, Mr
Speaker. I can give him the confirmation for which he has
asked. The purpose of the Bill is to include in
legislation, for the first time, a cross-governmental
definition of domestic abuse. We know that it is not
confined to physical violence but can take many forms, and
we want the law to reflect that.
-
(Bristol West)
(Lab)
I look forward to the introduction of the Bill, and, as the
Minister knows, I also look forward to working on it on a
cross-party basis. However, may I press her further? Is she
aware of a report published by Professor Sylvia Walby in
2009, which, I think, updates earlier research and draws
attention to the economic as well as the moral and
emotional case for tackling domestic violence earlier and
better?
-
I am extremely grateful to the hon. Lady, who always brings
her outside expertise to the House when she speaks of such
matters. It does not feel right to talk about the economic
effects of domestic abuse, because the emotional and
psychological impacts are of course far greater, but there
is an economic side as well. We look forward very much to
working on the Bill with the hon. Lady and others.
Policing: Protests
-
(Bexhill and Battle)
(Con)
3. What guidance his Department provides to police forces
on the policing of protests. [905644]
-
The Minister for Policing and the Fire Service (Mr Nick
Hurd)
The Home Office monitors protest threats, but the
management of protests is an operational and independent
matter for the police so no Home Office guidance or
briefings have been issued.
-
Does the Minister agree that protest groups whose core aim
is to disrupt legitimate business, such as meat production,
should pay towards the cost of policing? Surely it cannot
be right either for there to be too few police covering the
protests, or for there to be fewer police elsewhere because
those who are covering the protests cannot police the rest
of the community.
-
Mr Hurd
I understand the point that my hon. Friend is making, and I
understand how distressing it must be for a legitimate
business to be on the receiving end of a campaign of
disruption. I am sure that, as a good democrat, my hon.
Friend would not want to do anything to undermine the
principle of peaceful protest. When that crosses the line
into harassment or threats to public safety, we have
recourse to the Public Order Act 1986 and the Protection
from Harassment Act 1997.
-
Dr (Ealing Central and Acton)
(Lab)
Ealing’s police have been dealing with one protest for 23
years outside our local Marie Stopes clinic. The aim of the
protest is to prevent women from accessing healthcare.
Although our council has now introduced a public spaces
protection order, this is a national problem that requires
a national solution. Will the Minister respond to the
letter that 160 of us—including the Father of the House,
the right hon. and learned Member for Rushcliffe (Mr
Clarke), and three Select Committee Chairs—wrote to him
asking for his predecessor’s review to be published, and
will he opt for our proposed solution of buffer zones? That
would be an easy win for him at an early stage in his
already successful career.
-
Mr Hurd
The hon. Lady and I have debated this matter in Westminster
Hall, and we both know that there is a balance to be struck
between the right to protest and ensuring that protests do
not cross the line into harassment and intimidation. As she
says, her local council has introduced a public spaces
protection order, and we need to see how that goes. As for
the review that she mentioned, it was entered into in good
faith and it is ongoing.
Settled Status
-
(Stretford and Urmston)
(Lab)
4. What recent assessment he has made of the adequacy of
the new process for non-UK EU citizens resident in the UK
to apply for settled status. [R] [905645]
-
The Minister for Immigration (Caroline Nokes)
The application process for resident EU citizens and their
family members to obtain that status in the UK after we
leave the EU will be straightforward, streamlined and
user-friendly, and there will be a dedicated customer
contact centre to help people through the process. The
majority of applicants will need to meet only three
criteria: they will have to prove their identity, prove
that they are resident in the UK, and prove that they do
not pose a serious criminal or security threat.
-
According to the Migration Observatory, 64,000 non-Irish EU
nationals in the UK have never used the internet, and
250,000 have reported language-related difficulties in
accessing or keeping work. What capacity will the Home
Office have to deal with the many thousands of applicants
who will not be able to apply online?
-
It is crucially important that, in addition to our assisted
digital application process, we will have dedicated
support—lines to help people through the process. But I am
very conscious that there will be people with language
difficulties; that has been raised with us by some of the
user groups, and we are looking to see how we can assist
them as well.
-
(North Wiltshire)
(Con)
I greatly welcome the Minister’s announcement that the
process will be smooth and easy to follow, but agree with
the hon. Member for Stretford and Urmston (Kate Green) that
a very large number of otherwise extremely sophisticated
people in this country do not know that it is going to be
as easy as my hon. Friend describes. By what mechanism will
she get the message out to all these people that they are
welcome here, that the process will be easy, and,
crucially, that the cost of applying for residency will be
no more than the current cost for a British citizen of
applying for a passport?
-
We have been very clear from the outset that the cost of
the scheme will be no more than the cost of applying for a
British passport, and indeed for those who already have
permanent residency there will be no cost at all. It is
crucially important that we continue to work with our user
groups, and as we roll the scheme forward we will be
providing more information, including through our dedicated
email service that we are sending out to people. But we do
have an important communication job to make sure people
know how to apply and when the scheme opens.
-
(Edinburgh South West)
(SNP)
Efforts to involve community groups and public services
such as libraries in facilitating settled status
applications seem almost non-existent. I learned from
Scottish Government colleagues last week that in Scotland
the UK Government have made only cursory contact with only
two libraries. Can the Minister tell us what further
engagement is planned with community groups and public
services?
-
The Home Office continue to engage with people, businesses
and organisations across the UK. We are seeking a deal that
works for the entire UK and it is very important that we
make sure that user groups in Scotland, including
organisations such as Citizens Advice, have the necessary
resources and understanding of how this system is going to
work. We are rolling forward an engagement programme from
this point onwards, and I am looking forward to making
further announcements in due course.
-
(North West
Leicestershire) (Con)
Does the Minister agree that the fact that 3 or 3.5 million
EU citizens wish to remain in the UK after we leave the EU
is a huge vote of confidence in a post-Brexit Britain’s
future? Does she wish that all colleagues in this House had
as much confidence as those EU citizens who wish to remain
in the UK after we leave?
-
My hon. Friend makes an excellent point. There are more EU
citizens living and working here now than there were at the
time of the referendum, and we want to make sure that it is
very clear to them that they are welcome. We welcome the
contributions they make to both our communities and our
economy and we are working to make sure that the
streamlined process is as easy as possible.
-
(Manchester, Gorton)
(Lab)
EU citizens are worried that they might be subjected to the
same treatment as the Windrush generation; we have seen
similarly cruel treatment of highly skilled migrants
deported because of minor tax errors. What system is the
Minister putting in place to ensure that, when the settled
status system is up and running, issues can be picked up
internally without the need for a media storm and extensive
pressure from the Opposition?
-
Of course, it is crucial that the settled status scheme
gives people a digital confirmation of their right to live,
work and rent property in the UK, and we are absolutely
committed to doing that.
The hon. Gentleman also raised the issue of people with
minor tax discrepancies. It is important to reflect that
there have been several instances where those minor
discrepancies have run into tens of thousands of pounds,
and it is crucial that we pick up any discrepancies between
what people are declaring as their income for immigration
purposes and their income for tax purposes. We want to make
sure that we collect the amount of tax that is owing.
Sexual Exploitation of Vulnerable Children
-
(Telford) (Con)
5. What steps he is taking to tackle the sexual
exploitation of vulnerable children. [905646]
-
The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for the Home
Department (Victoria Atkins)
The Government attach the highest priority to tackling
child sexual exploitation and abuse, declaring it a
national threat and investing significantly in law
enforcement capacity to transform the police response. Last
year’s “Tackling child sexual exploitation” progress report
announced a £40 million package of measures to protect
children and young people from sexual abuse and
exploitation, and to crack down on offenders.
-
I thank the Minister for her response. Child sexual
exploitation victims often struggle to get justice. What
steps will she take to ensure that the police identify
grooming and child sexual exploitation, and that they do
not mistake those serious crimes for consensual sex?
-
I know that my hon. Friend is pursuing this campaign with
great vigour. We have provided £1.9 million to the College
of Policing to develop a training package for first
responders to vulnerable people. The package teaches the
importance of applying professional judgment when
identifying signs of issues such as grooming, and police
guidance makes it clear that sexual grooming and sexual
communication with a child are offences in their own right.
-
(York Central)
(Lab/Co-op)
Will the Minister also acknowledge that the grooming of
children can lead to young people over the age of 16 being
raped, whether or not so-called consent is given, as the
manipulation has already been sustained while the young
person was under 16? Will she look into changing the law in
this area so that prosecutions can be brought?
-
Every case has to be judged on its own facts, but I would
hope that any police investigation—and, indeed, any
prosecution—would reflect any history of grooming when the
case came before a judge and jury. If the hon. Lady wishes
to refer a particular case to me, I will of course be
delighted to review it.
-
Sir (New Forest West)
(Con)
Does my hon. Friend understand the level of public unease
surrounding Tommy Robinson?
-
I do. I cannot comment on a specific individual, but we are
clear that child exploitation is illegal and that it must
be, and will be, tackled by the police and the criminal
justice system.
-
(Barrow and Furness)
(Ind)
The Minister might be aware that I have raised with her
colleague, the Minister for Policing and the Fire Service,
the fact that if the child protection information sharing
project were able to keep details of vulnerable
mothers-to-be as well as of children, Poppi Worthington
would have been known to social services before she died.
Has the Minister had time to consider this shortcoming, and
will she put it right?
-
I would be happy to meet the hon. Gentleman to discuss that
important point. We are clear that there needs to be better
information sharing between the various agencies involved,
to prevent very sad cases such as the one that he has
raised.
-
(Swansea East)
(Lab)
We all acknowledge that child sexual exploitation can often
be a consequence of county lines, but the limited awareness
of the signs of it means that vulnerable children are often
left to the mercy of their abusers. To improve
identification, the emergency services need more support.
What training and support are the Government providing to
help them better recognise child victims of county lines
exploitation?
-
As the hon. Lady knows, county lines is a policing
priority. It is a major element of our serious violence
strategy, precisely because we recognise the harm that it
can cause not only through acts of violence among gang
members but in the wider community. That is precisely why
we have contributed £3.5 million towards a national
co-ordination centre to help spread the message and the
intelligence about county lines among police forces.
Knife Crime
-
(Dartford)
(Con)
6. What steps he is taking to tackle knife crime. [905647]
-
Mr (Rayleigh and
Wickford) (Con)
8. What steps he is taking to tackle knife crime. [905649]
-
The Secretary of State for the Home Department (Sajid
Javid)
The Government have published a serious violence strategy
that sets out a range of actions to tackle knife crime,
including a national media campaign, continuing support for
police action under Operation Sceptre, an offensive weapons
Bill and a new round of the Community Fund.
-
Does the Secretary of State agree that we need a
multi-faceted approach to tackling knife crime? It is
essential that we not only disrupt but educate those people
who are likely to offend, but it is also important that we
retain a high likelihood of imprisonment for anyone who
refuses to stop carrying a knife.
-
I agree with my hon. Friend. Offenders need to know that if
they commit serious crimes, a prison cell awaits them. That
is a huge deterrent, and it is also very much a part of the
serious violence strategy.
-
Mr Francois
Unfortunately, we have seen an increase in the prevalence
of knife crime in Essex over the past year. Some of it is
associated with county lines drugs operations moving out
into Essex from the capital. What action is the Home
Secretary’s Department taking, in association with the
Essex police, to fight this menace on our streets?
-
I know that Essex police are taking this issue seriously.
Among the actions that they are taking, one thing I would
encourage them to do more of is to apply to the Community
Fund and to focus a bit more on early intervention, which I
know they are interested in and have done successfully
before. They have received funding for such projects
before, and I would encourage them to seek it again.
-
(Croydon Central)
(Lab)
We know that prevention lies at the heart of much of the
knife crime issue, but there are things that can be done
now. The former Home Secretary, who is here today, told the
Home Affairs Committee that she would look at using more
criminal behaviour orders for people who have been
convicted of knife crime to stop them from going on social
media to get the attention that they crave. Will the Home
Secretary look at that issue?
-
The hon. Lady is right that much more can be done that does
not require legislation, so it can be done more quickly.
She talked about criminal behaviour orders. We are looking
at that very issue and seeing whether their use can be
expanded.
-
(Dudley North) (Lab)
Will the Home Secretary match the £2 million that the West
Midlands police and crime commissioner has managed to
scrape together to tackle gangs and knife and violent crime
with early intervention schemes, mediation programmes and
other initiatives? Will he meet me and a cross-party
delegation of MPs from the region to discuss how we can
work together to tackle the issue?
-
I commend the work that is being done locally by West
Midlands police to fight violent crime, particularly knife
crime, and I am sure that the funds that it has put to use
will make a difference. I would be happy to meet the hon.
Gentleman and other local Members of Parliament to discuss
the matter further.
-
(Lichfield)
(Con)
15. With 44 fatal stabbings in London this year alone, does
my right hon. Friend not accept that even the BME community
would now welcome a tougher stance on stop and
search—[Interruption.] Initially, the BME community argued
against it and that is why I used the word “even”.
Therefore, does my right hon. Friend think that it is time
to provide different guidance to the police on when stop
and search is appropriate? [905656]
-
Perhaps my hon. Friend listened to or heard about the
speech I gave to the Police Federation just last week, when
I said that the police should be examining all the powers
that they currently have, including stop and search.
Whenever they think that it is appropriate, they should not
hesitate to use it because that will help all communities.
-
(Caithness, Sutherland
and Easter Ross) (LD)
I am sure that we are all as one in wishing to tackle knife
crime, but it is the framework of law either side of the
Scottish border that interests me. In Scotland, 16 to
18-year-olds can purchase kitchen knives, yet it is a short
drive from Coldstream in Scotland to Alnwick in England.
Should we not harmonise the laws on either side of the
border to tackle knife crime?
-
The hon. Gentleman makes an important point. Devolution
means that it makes sense to co-operate on many important
issues, and this is one of them. We hope that the new
offensive weapons Bill will be supported by the Scottish
Government and that they will take similar action.
Police Numbers
-
Mr (Tewkesbury)
(Con)
7. What steps he is taking to increase police numbers.
[905648]
-
The Secretary of State for the Home Department (Sajid
Javid)
It is for Police and Crime Commissioners and
chief constables to decide the size of their workforces. We
are helping the police respond to changing demand with a
£460 million increase in overall funding in 2018-19,
including through the council tax precept, and many PCCs
are using that cash for extra recruitment.
-
Mr Robertson
I thank the Home Secretary for that response. Tackling
terrorism is obviously extremely important, but the more
immediate concern for people each and every day comes from
crimes such as burglary and antisocial behaviour. Is he
confident that police forces such as Gloucestershire’s will
have sufficient officers to follow up complaints about
those crimes and see them through right to the end?
-
I reassure my hon. Friend that we are helping the police to
respond to the changing demand that he mentions with the
extra £460 million overall. Many PCCs have made a
commitment to increase frontline policing. Gloucestershire
has received a £3.6 million increase this year and I am
sure that that will help. In addition, I will prioritise
more police resources in the next spending review.
-
(Delyn) (Lab)
The Metropolitan police estimate that police officers in
London alone are owed 200,000 rest days. How many are owed
across the country as a whole?
-
The Metropolitan police do a fantastic job and their
officers are incredibly dedicated. Over the past few weeks
that I have been in this role I have had the opportunity to
meet many of them. We must ensure that they have the
resources they need. That is why the Metropolitan police
received a record increase in the recent financial
settlement, which has been welcomed.
-
(Gainsborough)
(Con)
The Policing Minister is sitting next to the Home Secretary
and will be able to brief him on the crisis in police
funding in Lincolnshire. He will tell the Home Secretary
that we are one of the bottom three authorities in the
entire country for funding, so what is the Home Secretary
going to do to try to resolve this matter? It would take
relatively little and relatively few steps, and it would be
cost-effective to ensure that we were fairly funded in
Lincolnshire to help to resolve rural crime.
-
For a moment I thought I was back in Housing, Communities
and Local Government questions, as that sounds like a
question about local government funding in Lincolnshire. My
hon. Friend makes an important point. There is an increase
of more than £3 million for local policing in Lincolnshire
in the latest settlement, but this is an important issue
that I wish to look at much more closely as we get to the
spending review.
-
Sir (Kingston and Surbiton)
(LD)
The Home Secretary has twice talked about police resources
on “The Andrew Marr Show” since he took office, first on 8
April, when he said that police cuts have had no effect on
crime, and then this weekend, when he said that, as a
priority, he wants to secure extra funding for the police.
For the avoidance of doubt, is the Home Office’s new line
that the police do need high budgets? If so, how much and
when?
-
What I recognise is that, for a number of reasons, there
has been an increase in recorded crime and in certain types
of crime, such as cyber-crime, and there has been more
reporting of past sexual offences and of domestic crime. We
are encouraging that and we want to see it reported. We
have to make sure resources match that demand, which is why
the increase this year is very welcome. As we get to the
spending review, we have to make sure that we have the
right amount of resources for the long term.
-
Mr (Kettering)
(Con)
Police resources would go further if those they do arrest
and who are subsequently convicted were to serve their time
in jail in full, thus reducing reoffending rates. Does the
Home Secretary agree?
-
Where I agree with my hon. Friend is that it is important
that people who are sentenced serve the appropriate amount
of time. I am aware of the issues he raises, and I would
welcome discussing it with him further.
-
Mr (Jarrow) (Lab)
Since the Tories came to power, the number of police in the
Northumbria policing area has been cut by 27%. During the
same time, violent crime has gone up 177%. Is it just the
general public who notice the link between those figures,
or has the Secretary of State noticed it, too?
-
Perhaps it is worth my reminding the hon. Gentleman that at
the last election he stood on a manifesto that wanted to
cut police funding by 5% to 10%, whereas this Government
have protected it. If his correlation were correct—if it
were correct—crime would have gone up even more had Labour
been in office.
Fire Services: Workforce
-
The Minister for Policing and the Fire Service (Mr Nick
Hurd)
The statutory fire and rescue national framework includes
principles that all services should follow to ensure that
firefighters remain fit and fully supported to remain on
operational duties and in employment.
-
Fire and rescue services attended 574,659 incidents in the
year to June 2017, an increase on the previous year. Has
the Minister made any effort to ensure that the falling
number of firefighters and fire stations are not
overstretched?
-
Mr Hurd
Yes, because we believe the fire system has the resources
it needs to do the job against a backdrop of falling demand
for statutory fire services. Of course, the system is
sitting on over £600 million of reserves, which have grown
by over £0.25 billion since 2011.
-
The ageing work profile among our firefighters is partially
a result of changes to the firefighters’ pension scheme.
What assessment has the Minister made of the number of
redeployment opportunities for firefighters who are
compelled to work to the age of 60?
-
Mr Hurd
The hon. Gentleman raises an important point. The average
age of our firefighters is 42, and we have more than 1,000
firefighters who are over 56, which makes it extremely
important that fire authorities do not just assess fitness
but help firefighters to maintain and develop their fitness
and give firefighters all the necessary support and
protection when there is a problem so they can continue in
their operational duties. That is set out in the statutory
fire and rescue national framework, and it will be the
subject of independent inspection when independent
inspection starts this year.
-
Mr Speaker
With ingenuity, the hon. Member for Walsall North (Eddie
Hughes) will detect that his question is not unadjacent,
and if he wishes to put it now, he can.
-
(Walsall North)
(Con)
21. Thank you very much, Mr Speaker. May I ask my right
hon. Friend what work his Department can do to support the
Mayor of the West Midlands, , as he seeks greater
collaboration between the police and fire services in the
west midlands? [905662]
-
Mr Hurd
I assure my hon. Friend that I speak regularly to . The Government are
determined to honour the second devolution deal, including
with proposals to help to bring police and fire services
under the Mayor, as we have done in London and Manchester.
I assure my hon. Friend that we are absolutely committed to
working with both and the police and crime
commissioner to make sure that that happens by 2020.
-
(Lincoln) (Lab)
As a result of this Government’s cut to funding, along with
no recruitment drive, we have seen both a reduction in the
number of firefighters and an increasingly ageing
workforce. How do the Government plan to address the rising
age of firefighters? Will the Minister please give us some
specific examples?
-
Mr Hurd
I already have. Through the statutory national framework,
every fire authority is required not just to assess
firefighter fitness, but to help develop and maintain it,
giving assurances about support if problems arise, so that
every firefighter, whatever their age, is given the maximum
possible opportunity to continue to support their service
and remain on operational duties. That is set out in the
statutory framework.
Illegal Migrants: Employment
-
(Southport) (Con)
10. What steps he is taking to ensure that illegal migrants
cannot work in the UK. [905651]
-
The Minister for Immigration (Caroline Nokes)
Employers have had a duty to prevent illegal working since
1997. In 2016, we introduced tougher sanctions on rogue
employers and made illegal working a criminal offence, so
that wages can be seized as proceeds of crime. We have
recently introduced additional safeguards to protect legal
migrants seeking employment who do not have the necessary
documentation to establish their lawful immigration status.
-
I welcome my right hon. Friend’s commitment to reducing
illegal immigration. Does she agree that the best way to
deter illegal migrants from looking for work in the UK is
by preventing their entering the country with stringent
checks at air and sea ports?
-
I thank my hon. Friend for that question. All passengers
arriving in the UK at passport control are checked against
watch lists on arrival at the border. The majority of those
people are checked against our systems before they even
travel, through the collection of advance passenger
information. Between April 2010 and March 2018, we refused
entry to 138,992 people, including more than 18,000 in the
year to March 2018.
-
(Westmorland and Lonsdale)
(LD)
Those seeking asylum in the UK are currently banned from
working and, as a result, they are forced to live in penury
and are denied the right to contribute their skills to our
society. Does the Minister agree that this system is
lacking in both compassion and common sense? Will she
reform it?
-
Our asylum system provides accommodation and funding for
those who are here during the process of their asylum
claim. The hon. Gentleman makes an important point: we must
continue to make sure that the UK has one of the most
humane asylum systems in the world. We are working very
hard to make sure we do that.
Cyber-attacks
-
Mr (Slough)
(Lab)
11. What discussions he has had with Cabinet colleagues on
tackling cyber-attacks. [905652]
-
The Minister for Security and Economic Crime (Mr Ben
Wallace)
The Government recognise that cyber is a tier 1 risk to the
UK’s economic and national security. The Home Secretary and
I hold regular discussions with ministerial colleagues, the
National Security Council, GCHQ and other Government
Departments, both to tackle the overall threat and in
response to specific incidents.
-
Mr Dhesi
With respect to cyber-attacks, what steps have the Minister
and the Home Secretary taken to ensure that the major media
and social media companies are more vigilant in their
approach to cyber-crime and how that connects with what the
Government are doing?
-
Mr Wallace
Through both the Joint Fraud Taskforce and broader
cyber-security meetings in the Home Office, we work
together with the industry to produce a common cyber aware
campaign, to make sure that everyone is reading from the
same hymn sheet and advice is consistent across government.
We also work hand in hand with the National Cyber Security
Centre to make sure that advice is given both to small
businesses and the charitable sector, so that they are not
made vulnerable. By investing £1.9 billion in the national
cyber-capability programme ,we can invest in the capability
to see this off.
-
Mr (Scarborough and
Whitby) (Con)
Will my right hon. Friend join me in paying tribute to the
personnel at GCHQ Scarborough, which is known locally as
“Wireless station”? Together with their colleagues in
Cheltenham, they work day and night to keep us safe from
cyber-attacks and cyber-crime.
-
Mr Wallace
The workforce at GCHQ do a tremendous job of keeping us
safe from our enemies, and have done since all the way back
to GCHQ’s history in Bletchley Park. I was delighted that
some new GCHQ jobs were recently announced in my region,
the north-west, which shows that it is not just a
Cheltenham-based organisation, with sites in Yorkshire,
Cornwall and now Manchester.
-
(Torfaen)
(Lab)
The Security Minister indicated on the radio this morning
that counter-terror intelligence will now be shared with
local organisations, including the police and local
councils. Will he explain how the cyber-security of that
data will be guaranteed at a local level and what training
will be given to those who handle it? Crucially, will he
confirm that additional resources will be given to every
organisation that is asked to store it?
-
Mr Wallace
I am grateful for the hon. Gentleman’s question. We are
sharing the information more widely in three pilot schemes
that will be funded by the Home Office, so the funding will
be met by central Government. The first three pilots are
going to be based in Birmingham, Manchester and London. Of
course, local authorities, social services and mainstream
county police forces deal with sensitive information every
day, and that is already subject to data protection rules
and appropriate levels of security. We will continue to
advise them on that, and the information that we share will
of course be declassified before they get it.
Domestic Violence
-
(Congleton)
(Con)
13. What steps he is taking to tackle domestic violence.
[905654]
-
The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for the Home
Department (Victoria Atkins)
The Government have introduced a new offence of coercive or
controlling behaviour, rolled out new tools such as
domestic violence protection orders, and committed £100
million to support victims of violence against women and
girls, including a £17 million service transformation fund
that supports 41 areas to promote early intervention and
prevention. We are of course working towards the
introduction of a draft Bill before the end of this
Session.
-
Does the Minister support the concept of family hubs in
local communities, which would mean that, if a relationship
were under strain, people would have somewhere to go at an
early stage? That might prevent the escalation to violence.
-
I thank my hon. Friend for her important work on supporting
children and families. The Government are committed to
early intervention in and the prevention of domestic abuse.
We already fund schemes—such as Women’s Aid’s “Ask Me”
scheme—that create safe spaces in communities so that
victims can disclose. Following the closing of our domestic
abuse consultation last week, we are considering all
options on doing more.
-
(Bishop Auckland)
(Lab)
Will the Minister please strengthen the domestic violence
services in North Yorkshire, where the Tory council has
closed its refuge, meaning that victims flood over into
Labour Durham and put our refuges under unacceptable
pressure?
-
I am concerned to hear that accusation. If the hon. Lady
feels that local commissioners are not meeting their
obligations, will she please write to me so that I can look
into the matter?
Leaving the EU: Seasonal Workers
-
(St Austell and Newquay)
(Con)
14. What steps his Department is taking to ensure that the
hospitality and tourism sector can continue to access
seasonal workers from the EEA after the UK leaves the EU.
[905655]
-
The Minister for Immigration (Caroline Nokes)
The Government are considering a range of options for the
future immigration system. We will make decisions based on
evidence and engagement. We have asked the independent
Migration Advisory Committee to advise on the economic and
social impact of the UK’s exit from the EU and on how the
UK’s immigration system should be aligned with a modern
industrial strategy.
-
The tourism and hospitality sector’s No. 1 concern is
post-Brexit access to the labour force. Many seasonal
workers will not qualify for settled status under the
current framework because of the seasonal nature of their
work. Will the Minister consider some sort of seasonal
workers scheme for the hospitality sector, along the same
lines as a seasonal agricultural workers scheme?
-
I recognise the importance of tourism in my hon. Friend’s
constituency and his work in the all-party group on the
visitor economy. Seasonal workers make an important
contribution to the tourism and hospitality sector, and it
is a sector that we wish to see thrive. Any EU citizen who
is currently in the UK will be able to benefit from the
settlement scheme that we are establishing. For the longer
term, we have asked the independent Migration Advisory
Committee to advise us; I am sure that it will be mindful
of my hon. Friend’s points.
-
(East Lothian)
(Lab)
Along with the hospitality industry, the agricultural
industry is crying out for help on migrant workers. Will
the Government confirm that they will reinstate the
seasonal agricultural workers scheme and allow it to
reflect the needs in different areas, such as my county of
East Lothian?
-
The hon. Gentleman has identified farming and my hon.
Friend the Member for St Austell and Newquay (Steve Double)
asked about tourism, but a number of other sectors are
affected, including fisheries, which has been raised with
me recently. It is crucial that we take the advice of the
Migration Advisory Committee and that we have
evidence-based policy making. I reassure the hon. Gentleman
and other Members that I am looking into this issue very
closely indeed.
Counter-extremism
-
(Spelthorne)
(Con)
16. What steps he is taking to tackle extremism. [905657]
-
Dame (Meriden)
(Con)
18. What steps he is taking to tackle extremism. [905659]
-
(Gravesham) (Con)
22. What steps he is taking to tackle extremism. [905663]
-
The Secretary of State for the Home Department (Sajid
Javid)
The 2015 counter-extremism strategy committed the
Government for the first time to tackling the non-terrorist
harm that extremism causes. Since 2015, supported by civil
society groups, we have taken steps to protect public
institutions from the threat of extremism.
-
In the light of the Parsons Green attack, which was
committed by a refugee who had been fostered in my
constituency, what steps is my right hon. Friend taking
directly to make sure that the public feel safe when going
about their daily business?
-
I can tell my hon. Friend that the new counter-terrorism
strategy introduced today touches on counter-extremism as
well, and some lessons were learned from the Parsons Green
attack. If he would like to learn more about that, I am
happy to meet him.
-
Dame
After the bombing in Manchester, my constituency
experienced a sudden sharp loss of police resources in
favour of the city of Birmingham, so I welcome the £450
million extra to be spent on combating terrorism. Does the
Home Secretary agree that programmes such as the Church
Urban Fund’s Near Neighbours scheme are also needed to
tackle the underlying causes of extremism and to help
strengthen social cohesion?
-
I agree very much with my right hon. Friend. She will know
that I am a big fan of the Near Neighbours scheme. Since
2011 the Government have committed more than £11 million to
it, and there is a further £2.6 million agreed for the next
two years. There may also be support available from the
Government’s “Building a Stronger Britain Together”
campaign.
-
My constituents will be absolutely aghast at the thought of
people from organisations such as ISIS returning here. What
steps can the Government take to prevent harm to our
population by people from such organisations?
-
My hon. Friend’s constituents are right to be aghast at
that, and I fully understand that feeling. This is a
Europe-wide issue, and I have already discussed it with
some of my counterparts in Europe. We are making sure that
individuals who return from conflict zones such as Syria
are properly investigated and potentially prosecuted by
police, and that if they do come back and live here we have
proper restrictions in place.
-
(Hornsey and Wood
Green) (Lab)
Will the Home Secretary please delegate a Minister to meet
me about an issue on which it is crucial that work is done
sensitively, because errors can occur? I refer to a
constituent whose home was mistakenly broken into by terror
police. He has been unable to return to work, and his
neighbours all believe that he is a terrorist. Will the
Home Secretary please delegate a Minister to meet me to
sort that out as soon as possible?
-
It sounds like a very important issue, and I will make sure
that that is done.
Forensic Testing
-
(High Peak) (Lab)
17. What recent assessment he has made of trends in waiting
times for forensic test results in criminal cases. [905658]
-
The Minister for Policing and the Fire Service (Mr Nick
Hurd)
Waiting times for forensic test results differ between
police forces depending on the types of tests required and
the different arrangements that each police force has in
place to deliver its forensic services.
-
My local police force in Derbyshire tells me that, since
the closure of one of the private forensic testing
companies, it now takes more than six months for forensic
tests in criminal cases to come back. That is obviously far
in excess of the pre-charge bail conditions that it can put
on people, and is seriously hampering it in its abilities
to arrest and detain offenders.
-
Mr Hurd
I assume that that data is true, and I share the hon.
Lady’s concern about it. Our overall perception is that the
majority of forensic services are currently being delivered
faster, more reliably and to higher quality standards than
in the past, but the system has had to absorb a couple of
quite significant shocks recently, which is why I am
conducting a review with stakeholders into the future
effectiveness of the forensic market.
Immigration
-
The Minister for Immigration (Caroline Nokes)
We will continue building and managing an immigration
system that meets the economic and social needs of the UK,
and I will set out further plans in due course. I am
committed to a fair and humane system, and we are reviewing
the operational assurance regime across the borders,
immigration and citizenship system to ensure that it is
effective and reflects best practice.
-
In recent months we have seen a squeeze on doctors’ ability
to come to this country to fill vital roles in our NHS.
What steps are the Government taking to ensure that we can
access the skills that are needed while ensuring that our
immigration system becomes sustainable?
-
We keep the tier 2 cap under close review. Priority is
given to doctors working in shortage specialisms, as
determined by the Migration Advisory Committee, and no one
has ever been refused for any of those posts. We have taken
steps to boost training places for nurses and doctors, and
a record number of undergraduates will begin medical
training by 2020, with 1,500 new places.
-
Several hon. Members rose—
-
Mr Speaker
Order. As I seek to squeeze in the penultimate question, I
am sceptical as to how enormously helpful it is for a vast
array of colleagues suddenly to display an interest, but
how can I turn down the Chair of the Home Affairs
Committee, the right hon. Member for Normanton, Pontefract
and Castleford (Yvette Cooper)?
-
(Normanton, Pontefract
and Castleford) (Lab)
Thank you, Mr Speaker.
The Home Affairs Committee recommended in February that the
Government look again at the tier 2 system, because doctors
were already being turned away. The BMJ is now reporting
that 1,500 doctors have been turned away even though they
had job offers in the national health service. In the Home
Affairs Committee and the Health and Social Care Committee,
and across the House, there is a strong desire for us to
make sure that we get the doctors we need. The Home Office
said in response to our recommendations that it was simply
going to wait until the publication of the MAC report in
October. That is too late. I urge the Government to change
the system now to ensure that we can get in the doctors we
need.
-
I thank the right hon. Lady for her question, and I welcome
the comments that various Select Committees have made on
this issue. I have absolutely no doubt that she heard the
Home Secretary’s comments yesterday, and I reassure her
that we are looking at the matter closely.
Modern Slavery
-
(Stoke-on-Trent
Central) (Lab/Co-op)
24. What steps his Department is taking to tackle modern
slavery. [905665]
-
The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for the Home
Department (Victoria Atkins)
The Government remain committed to stamping out the
despicable crime of modern slavery. We have strengthened
the operational law enforcement response and introduced
world-leading requirements for businesses to report on
slavery in their supply chains, and we are now transforming
the support that we provide to victims.
-
Kevin Hyland, the independent anti-slavery commissioner,
stated in his resignation letter that he had too often felt
that his independence was subject to the discretion of the
Home Office, rather than being on a statutory basis. What
will the Minister do to ensure that the next commissioner
is given the independence that he needs for his role to be
flexible?
-
May I record our thanks to Mr Hyland for the invaluable
work that he did as the commissioner? The whole point of
the role of the commissioner is that it is independent, so
we very much look forward to filling the position with a
similarly robust and independent person in due course.
Topical Questions
-
Mr (Scarborough and
Whitby) (Con)
T1. If he will make a statement on his departmental
responsibilities. [905667]
-
The Secretary of State for the Home Department (Sajid
Javid)
Yesterday we marked a year since the appalling attack at
London Bridge and Borough Market, and less than two weeks
ago we remembered those lost at Manchester Arena. Those
sobering occasions remind us that the first duty of the
Government, and my highest priority as Home Secretary, is
to protect the public. Therefore, I today launch the
Government’s new counter-terrorism strategy, CONTEST,
following the comprehensive review of our counter-terrorism
approach announced by the Prime Minister a year ago. The
strategy sets out how the Government will continue to
tackle the serious and evolving threat from terrorism.
-
Mr Goodwill
Will my right hon. Friend reassure me that an increased
ability for MI5 and other public bodies to share
information will not only deliver a more effective and
joined-up response to the fast-changing nature of potential
terrorism, but will also come with the right safeguards to
protect the use of that information?
-
I can give my right hon. Friend that assurance. One of the
lessons learned from the 2017 attacks was that MI5 could
share some of its information on a wider basis—not just
with counter-terrorism police, but perhaps with elements of
local government and neighbourhood police. That will happen
in the pilots to which the Minister for Security and
Economic Crime referred earlier. I assure my right hon.
Friend that the information will be declassified and that
there will be certain safeguards in place.
-
(Edinburgh South West)
(SNP)
Denzel Darku is a student nurse and a tireless volunteer
who carried the baton for Scotland at the Commonwealth
Games in Glasgow. He dreams of a career in NHS Scotland,
but faces deportation on a technicality, through no fault
of his own. My colleagues in the Scottish Government have
already written to the Secretary of State about this young
man’s case, but they have not had a reply. Will the
Secretary of State meet me to discuss this young man, who
only wants to stay in Scotland to serve the national health
service?
-
I am pleased that the hon. and learned Lady has raised that
case, because it was also raised with me last week by the
leader of the Scottish Conservatives, , who is also very
concerned about it and has asked me to look into it. The
hon. and learned Lady might know that there is an appeal
going on with regard to Mr Darku, and I should not say too
much about that. However, I am very sympathetic about the
situation, and there will be no enforcement action while
the review takes place.
-
(Congleton)
(Con)
T3. Do Ministers agree that more needs to be done to help
women who want to exit prostitution to do so? [905669]
-
The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for the Home
Department (Victoria Atkins)
I thank my hon. Friend for raising that point, and I also
thank the all-party parliamentary group on prostitution and
the global sex trade for its report. I know that my hon.
Friend is a member of that group. The Government are
committed to tackling the harm and exploitation that can be
associated with prostitution. Those who want to leave
should have every opportunity to do so. We have provided
more than £2 million to organisations supporting
prostitutes and sex workers, and we are now funding a study
to look into the scale and nature of prostitution.
-
Ms (Hackney North and Stoke
Newington) (Lab)
With reference to the earlier questions on how the cap on
tier 2 visas is depriving the NHS of much-needed doctors,
the visa cap is damaging the NHS at a time when it is
already facing a doctor shortage of 10,000 and an overall
staff shortage of more than 100,000. The Home Office is
turning away doctors the NHS needs because it is unable to
breach the cap. Ministers have referred to briefings in the
press in the past few days, but does the Secretary of State
appreciate that the NHS needs him to come forward as a
matter of urgency and say that he is prepared to review the
workings of the cap to allow us to recruit those doctors?
-
It is right that we control immigration and try to bring it
down to sustainable levels in the long term, but it is also
correct that we let in the skills that we need, whether for
our health service or our businesses. This is an important
issue, and as we heard earlier, Select Committees have
written to me and I am looking at the issue very carefully.
-
(Weston-super-Mare)
(Con)
T8. On 6 April the USA announced tough sanctions against 24
Russian Government officials and oligarchs, including Oleg
Deripaska, whose company floated here in London last year.
When will we publish an equivalent British sanctions list
on people whose presence and dirty money are not welcome on
our shores? [905674]
-
The Minister for Security and Economic Crime (Mr Ben
Wallace)
I pay tribute to my hon. Friend for the work he has done on
this issue as the Government’s anti-corruption tsar. Like
him, I was incredibly interested in the sanctions list that
the United States published. He will be aware that the
Sanctions and Anti-Money Laundering Act 2018 has gone
through this House. There are further opportunities to
strengthen the regime with, I hope, a Bill coming forward
from the Department for Business, Energy and Industrial
Strategy with regard to designations. We will be exploring
that issue. It is important to note that the United Kingdom
has recently been at the forefront of driving out dirty
Russian money—or indeed other dirty money. It is important
that we tackle this issue head on.
-
(Sheffield Central)
(Lab)
T2. The Home Secretary said yesterday that he is open to
looking again at the inclusion of international students in
net migration targets. He will know that there is strong
support for that move on both sides of the House. Will he
therefore meet me and other officers of the all-party
parliamentary group on international students, prior to the
publication of the Migration Advisory Committee review that
his predecessor so wisely commissioned? [905668]
-
First, it is worth reminding the House that there is no cap
on the number of students who can come into the country. I
know that the hon. Gentleman knows that, but it is not well
known more widely. I do think that this issue is important,
and that is why I have committed to take a look at it in
due course.
-
(Morley and Outwood)
(Con)
T10. The people of Morley and Outwood want to see more
police officers on the streets. What are the Government
doing to recruit more police officers, particularly in West
Yorkshire? [905676]
-
The Minister for Policing and the Fire Service (Mr Nick
Hurd)
We have taken steps that have led to an additional £460
million of taxpayers’ money going into the police system,
including another £9.9 million for West Yorkshire, where
the police and crime commissioner has said that he will use
it to recruit more than 140 police officers and staff—and
that is on top of an increase in 2016. I am sure that my
hon. Friend will do a great job in holding him to account
to make sure that those additional resources are used to
the benefit of her constituents.
-
Ms (Westminster North)
(Lab)
T4. A few weeks ago, the Government’s chief inspector of
borders and immigration said of the right to rent policy
that it“is yet to demonstrate its worth as a tool to
encourage immigration compliance”,that“the Home Office has
failed to coordinate, maximise or even measure…its use”,and
that“externally it is doing little to address stakeholders’
concerns.”Is it not time to listen to the wide range of
concerns about this failing policy? What is the Secretary
of State going to do to review it? [905670]
-
The Minister for Immigration (Caroline Nokes)
The right to rent is an important component of the
Government’s policies to make sure that those who are
living here illegally do not find it easy to access the
services and facilities that those who are here legally
access. It is really important that we draw a clear
distinction between legal and illegal immigration. The
Government are determined to make sure that we implement
our policies in an effective but humane way.
-
(Corby) (Con)
I was humbled to take part in the Firefighters Memorial Day
commemorations in Corby a few weeks ago. Will my right hon.
Friend join me in commending our brilliant and brave
firefighters in Northamptonshire for all they do?
-
Mr Hurd
I am certainly happy to commend firefighters not just in
Northamptonshire but across the country, who do an
incredibly difficult and demanding job within a service
that this country can rightly be very proud of.
-
(Bethnal Green and Bow)
(Lab)
T5. The Home Office revoked some 40,000 visas from students
of the test of English for international communication
following the BBC “Panorama” investigation of 2014, and it
is estimated that 4,000 to 7,000 of those students were
wrongly accused. The Home Secretary gave my right hon.
Friend the Member for East Ham (Stephen Timms) an
undertaking that he would look at that. Can he update the
House and explain whether his Department will have an
urgent helpline for those affected and hold a review of the
matter? [905671]
-
I thank the hon. Lady for her question. We regard the
action that the Home Office has taken in response to
information received from the Educational Testing Service
as proportionate. However, we are reviewing the position of
those who remain in the UK.
-
(Hastings and Rye)
(Con)
While I welcome the Home Secretary’s comments about
ensuring non-EU migration for the NHS, may I ask him to
also bear in mind the needs of the private sector and
ensure that any solution he finds does not merely put more
pressure on the tier 2 visa cap? We must ensure that our
private sector businesses get the highly experienced,
skilled labour that they need.
-
It is an honour to take a question from my right hon.
Friend, and I can give her that assurance. She is
absolutely right; we have to make sure we have the skills
that we need for both our public sector and our private
sector.
-
(Stretford and Urmston)
(Lab)
T6. I am sure the Home Secretary will join me in sending
condolences following the appalling incident in my
constituency last week at a car meet, when a so-called
drifting car crashed into spectators, killing one and
grievously injuring six others. Will he work with me and
colleagues around the country to look at how we may need to
strengthen the enforcement mechanisms available to the
police and local authorities so that we can curb the spread
of those events and stop them being displaced elsewhere?
[905672]
-
Of course I join the hon. Lady in what she has said, and my
thoughts are with all those affected. She is right to raise
that issue, and this is a good opportunity to look at it
more closely. I will happily discuss it with her.
-
(Totnes) (Con)
Further to the comments on the tier 2 application route and
the effect on the NHS—it is working against the best
interests of patients—will the Home Secretary consider the
impact on areas outside London, the costs to NHS staff of
making applications and the cost of their failure, in
monetary terms and for patients? Will he also look at the
effect on scientists and researchers?
-
My hon. Friend makes a good point. I thank her for the letter
that she sent on behalf of the Health Committee, in which she
made some other excellent points, and I assure her that I am
looking at it carefully.
-
Mr (Huddersfield)
(Lab/Co-op)
T9. Will the Secretary of State look carefully at policing
numbers, particularly in relation to the growth of gang
culture in our country, which is linked to knife crime? The
police cannot cope without the resources to tackle gangs.
[905675]
-
Yes.
-
(Chelmsford) (Con)
I thank the Home Secretary for looking again at the impact of
the tier 2 visa cap on doctors. Will he also look at the
impact on trainee doctors such as my constituent, who has
completed most of his GP specialist training on a spouse visa
but, due to a marriage breakdown, now needs a tier 2 visa?
-
I thank my hon. Friend for her question. She makes a really
important point. I am conscious that it is not only about NHS
trusts seeking to bring in doctors from overseas; there are
also a number in training and at university who are seeking
to gain employment opportunities here. She will have heard
the comments of my right hon. Friend the Home Secretary.
-
(Leeds Central) (Lab)
Some Iraqi Kurds who applied for asylum in the UK in Saddam’s
time did so under false names because they were terrified of
what would happen to them if they were sent back. It appears
that some of them, having been granted asylum, are now having
their British passports withdrawn simply because they have
told the Home Office what their real name is. Does the Home
Secretary think that that is fair?
-
I thank the right hon. Gentleman for raising that. I was not
aware of it, so I am pleased that he has brought it to my
attention. I would love to hear more, and perhaps he could
meet me to see what we can do.
-
(Angus) (Con)
As my right hon. Friend will be aware, soft fruit farmers in
Angus and across the United Kingdom are gearing up for a busy
season. What assurances can he provide to those farmers that
they will be able to access the workforce they require, and
can he give a timescale for when that will be delivered?
-
My hon. Friend has been consistent in making a very strong
case for supporting the Scottish strawberry and, indeed,
raspberry. I am conscious that my right hon. Friend the Home
Secretary visited her constituency recently and listened to
some of her constituents’ views, and we are looking at the
issue of seasonal workers very closely.
-
Dr (Central Ayrshire)
(SNP)
Several Members have raised the fact that more than 1,500
doctors have been turned away in the past five months because
of the tier 2 visa cap being reached. That crude approach, in
which points are now gained only with a qualifying salary of
£60,000 instead of £30,000, means that many areas of the UK
and almost all public services are excluded; a doctor’s
salary cannot simply be doubled. When will this be changed?
-
The hon. Lady will have heard an earlier answer, which stated
clearly that nobody on a shortage occupation list has been
turned away. Both I and the Home Secretary are very conscious
of the points that have been made repeatedly this afternoon.
We know that there is a real challenge in the NHS accessing
trained doctors. The Department of Health and Social Care is
doing excellent work to make sure that we increase the number
of training places in the UK, but the calls are being heard.
-
(North Dorset) (Con)
Does my right hon. Friend the Home Secretary agree that the
current shopfront advertisements of Lush are clearly
anti-police, are in very poor taste and should be withdrawn?
-
People can have legitimate concerns about the so-called spy
cops issue, and that is why there is an inquiry, but I very
much agree with my hon. Friend. I do not think that Lush
should be tarring all police officers with the same bath
bomb.
-
(Belfast East)
(DUP)
Is the Home Secretary aware of the increasing farce besetting
Border Force recruitment in Northern Ireland, and will he
meet us to consider how best and most fairly we can have
exactly the same conditions for Northern Ireland applicants
as those that apply in the rest of the United Kingdom?
-
The hon. Gentleman will be aware that he and others have
raised this with me. We have looked very carefully at
recruitment processes in Northern Ireland to make sure that
there is absolutely no bias, taking into account the Equality
and Human Rights Commission’s comments.
|