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IPPR sets out alternative model
for a functional UK asylum system
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Plan follows analysis showing
Home Office’s hostile approach of deterrence won’t work, even
if Rwanda scheme ruled lawful
A new report from IPPR has established
a credible plan to respond to asylum seekers taking risky
journeys across the Channel.
Following hours of detailed
interviews, workshops and research, IPPR is proposing a
three-point plan to deliver a humane and effective response to
the rise in small boat crossings:
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Create new safe and
accessible routes for people seeking refuge in the UK by piloting a new
refugee visa, widening currently restrictive refugee family
reunion rules and expanding the UK Resettlement
Scheme.
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Renew collaboration with
European neighbours to enhance cooperation on tackling people smuggling,
resolve the immigration status of people in northern France,
and agree fair rules for deciding which country should process
asylum claims.
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Fix the UK’s broken domestic
asylum system through reducing the backlog, introducing a new approach
to voluntary asylum returns and reforming the current model of
asylum accommodation
Proposed policies include piloting a
new refugee visa for Afghans, which would allow asylum seekers to
make an application for temporary leave to enter the UK at
embassies in other countries. Once in the UK, they would then be
able to apply for asylum, reducing the need for dangerous
journeys across the Channel. In the past year, 98 per cent of
initial decisions on Afghan cases were grants of asylum.
While the current government’s focus
on European cooperation has primarily been on tougher enforcement
and tackling people smugglers, IPPR proposes negotiating a new
deal on asylum claims. In broad terms, this would mean the UK
would accept transfers of people for family reunion purposes but
in return relocate asylum seekers who had arrived in the UK from
across the Channel to the first EU state of irregular
entry.
The UK would also participate in a
Europe-wide ‘solidarity mechanism’ - which could involve
accepting a share of relocations, or providing financial
transfers or other support. Contrary to recent claims, this would
not require accepting 120,000 asylum seekers annually, which the
report’s authors say is an “entirely spurious” figure.
But all of this would work only if the
UK’s domestic asylum system is also fixed. IPPR’s report outlines
the need to reduce the asylum backlog through fast and fair
decisions on asylum claims.
The new plan by IPPR follows detailed,
policy-by-policy analysis of current government strategy which
shows existing plans to ‘stop the boats’ are far more rhetoric
than substance.
The approach adopted by and is too heavily reliant on
expanding the hostile
environment and
increasing deterrents, says the report. But evidence shows that
this is unlikely to stop the boats as even internal Home Office
research acknowledges that asylum seekers are unaware of these
policies and are in any case primarily focused on finding safety
and security.
So far,
inadmissibility rules
introduced by the government post-Brexit
have had a negligible effect, given
the lack of agreements in place with safe third countries. Of the
60,595 applicants identified for consideration on inadmissibility
grounds between January 2021 and June 2023, only 83
inadmissibility decisions were in fact served and there were only
23 enforced removals.
Additionally, the
Rwanda policy
is almost certainly destined for
failure as, even if it is ruled legal, there is little chance the
country will be able to accept asylum seekers on the scale
necessary for the plan to work. In 2021 only 487 asylum decisions
were made by the Rwandan government, compared to 45,744 people
who made the journey to the UK via small boats across the Channel
last year.
The likely
failure of the Rwanda policy
will mean that the Illegal Migration Act will backfire, the report says. As arrivals outpace
removals, the end result will be a ‘perma-backlog’ of people
trapped in limbo in the UK, unable to be removed and unable to
claim asylum.
Marley Morris, associate
director for migration at IPPR, said:
“The government has challenged
those opposed to the Rwanda deal to propose a credible
alternative. Our new report does just that. Compared with the
impractical, costly Rwanda plan, our focus is on solutions which
are humane, evidence-based and deliverable.
“Under our approach, the
government would reform and expand safe alternatives for people
seeking refuge in the UK, to divert them away from crossing the
Channel in dangerous, unseaworthy boats.
“New deals with the UK’s partners
in Europe would seek a managed, orderly approach to resolving
asylum claims.
“And finally, we need to get to
grips with the failures of the asylum system at home with a
concerted effort to triage asylum claims and bring down the
backlog, saving millions on hotels in the process.”