Asked by Lord Roberts of Llandudno To ask Her Majesty’s
Government what steps they are taking to improve the assessment of
immigration applications by UK Visas and Immigration, given that 40
per cent of immigration appeals heard by the Immigration and Asylum
Tribunals in 2016 were granted. The Minister of State, Home Office
(Baroness Williams of Trafford) (Con) My Lords, UKVI
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Asked by
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To ask Her Majesty’s Government what steps they are taking to
improve the assessment of immigration applications by UK
Visas and Immigration, given that 40 per cent of immigration
appeals heard by the Immigration and Asylum Tribunals in 2016
were granted.
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The Minister of State, Home Office (Baroness Williams of
Trafford) (Con)
My Lords, UKVI is focused on improving the quality of all
decision-making. While appeals are allowed for a variety of
reasons, and many of the appeals being heard are now fairly
historic, we recognise that continued improvement is
necessary. That is why investment is being made via a
stronger assurance regime, better and more frequent training,
strengthened feedback loops, and creating new governance and
structures. Additionally, we are working with Her Majesty’s
Courts and Tribunals Service on reducing the number of
outstanding appeals and the time taken through the appeals
system.
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(LD)
I thank the Minister for her response, but this whole
scenario shows that we are in a very desperate situation. For
instance, I was told by the Minister that, in 2005, 17% of
decisions went to appeal. That was 13,221 decisions. By 2016
this had doubled to 40%. That means that 40% of folk were
dissatisfied and, on appeal, won. I imagine that, over the
past 10 years, we have had perhaps 200,000 successful
appeals. Does this situation not undermine confidence in the
Government and in the initial decision system of the
immigration process? Is it not time that we did something
about this? Forty per cent is not something to be played
about with. Can I ask another question?
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Noble Lords
No!
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Shall I try? I am afraid that we have to face facts. With the
Windrush—
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The (CB)
My Lords, may I ask the Leader of the House to read out what
it says in the Companion about Questions at Question Time?
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I do not have the Companion with me, so I will leave that for
another time. The noble Lord rightly makes a point about the
number of appeals increasing. Actually, they went down
slightly in the past year, but the number of applications is
increasing over time and that is something to be mindful of.
He also asked about better decision-making. I have several
things to say about that. First, the average age of appeals
being determined by the First-tier Tribunal is, according to
HMCTS statistics, 50 weeks. That is a considerable length of
time. The latest data on win rates is certainly not where we
would like it to be.
Appeals are allowed for a variety of reasons. Often it is
because new evidence is presented before the tribunal that
was not available to the decision-maker at the time. Often,
the information is presented very shortly before the hearing
and too late for the Home Office to withdraw the case. But
one specific reason for the higher rate of allowed appeals is
that many cases going through the appeal system are now quite
old. The average age of a human rights case is over a year.
In that time, often appellants have built up new rights.
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(Lab)
My Lords, given that we heard on the news last night that
over 60 of the Windrush generation may have been wrongly
deported, and the recent observation of the UN special
rapporteur that shifting from the rhetoric of a hostile
environment to one of a compliance environment will have
little effect if the underlying legislative framework remains
intact, will the Government now review that legislative
framework as a matter of urgency?
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I will refer to the cases that the noble Baroness asked
about—63 people who may have been wrongly deported. As the
Home Secretary said, the department has been checking records
back to 2002, some 16 years ago, when electronic records
began, looking at all removals and deportations of Caribbean
nationals aged 45-plus. So far, 63 cases have been identified
where Caribbean individuals could have entered the UK before
1973. This means that, of the 8,000 total deportation and
administrative removal records that came up, so far there is
a focus on 63 because something in their record indicates
that they could have entered before 1973. Of those, there are
32 foreign national offenders and 31 administrative removals.
So it does not mean that 63 people have been wrongfully
removed or deported; it is the number of cases that merit
further investigation. But I thank the noble Baroness for
bringing that point up.
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The Lord
My Lords, there has been much discussion about targets for
the number of removals over the past few weeks, which we are
all aware of. As the average length of time that these
appeals are taking is increasing, is it not the case that we
need some targets to reduce the length of time, because
people are being left in limbo with their lives are on hold
as these are going through?
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The right reverend Prelate is absolutely right to point out
what we are endeavouring to do, which is to reduce the amount
of time that people spend in limbo, to use a Christian term,
while their appeals are heard or indeed while their cases are
heard. I thank him for making that point. It is what we are
endeavouring to do.
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(Con)
My Lords, is it not correct that, from time to time, we
review the criteria that are applied in the appointment of
tribunal chairmen and members? Will my noble friend indicate
whether that review has taken place recently and what the
basic criteria are for appointing the chairs of tribunals?
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My noble friend is absolutely right to make the point about
the review of tribunal members. I cannot tell him when the
last review was, but I certainly will write to him.
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(Lab
Co-op)
My Lords, what does the Minister think is the reason for the
increasing number of appeals?
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I think I tried to explain that to the noble Lord, Lord
Roberts. It is noticeable that one of the specific reasons
for the higher rate of allowed appeals is that many of the
cases going through the appeals system are very old. As I
said to the noble Lord, Lord Roberts, the average age of a
human rights case is over a year, and appellants have often
built up new rights over that time.
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