Ms Diane Abbott (Hackney North and Stoke Newington) (Lab) (Urgent
Question) To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department if
she will make a statement on the detention centre at Yarl’s Wood.
The Minister for Immigration (Caroline Nokes) Ensuring that
individuals abide by immigration rules is an essential...Request free trial
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To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department if
she will make a statement on the detention centre at
Yarl’s Wood.
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Ensuring that individuals abide by immigration rules is
an essential part of an effective immigration system.
This includes individuals leaving the UK if they have no
lawful basis to remain. Of course, we all hope that those
with no right to remain in the UK will leave voluntarily,
and we have measures in place to assist those who wish to
do so. However, this is not always the case, and
detention is therefore an important tool.
The dignity and welfare of all individuals detained is of
upmost importance, and any decision to detain is made on
a case-by-case basis, taking into account individual
circumstances. But let me be clear: Home Office officials
work with any individual with no right to be in the UK,
both detained—including those at Yarl’s Wood—and in the
community, to assist with their return at any time, if
they decide to leave the UK. In fact, 95% of people
without the right to be here are managed in the community
and most people detained under immigration powers spend
only very short periods in detention.
In 2017, 92% of people were detained for four months or
less, and nearly two thirds were detained for less than a
month. As well as regular reviews of detention,
individuals can apply for bail at any time. I visited
Yarl’s Wood on 8 February to see that all detainees were
being treated in a safe and dignified manner, and I
understand that the right hon. Member for Hackney North
and Stoke Newington (Ms Abbott) is meeting the Home
Secretary to discuss this issue very shortly.
The provision of 24-hour, seven-day-a-week healthcare in
all immigration removal centres ensures that detainees
have ready access to medical professionals and levels of
primary care in line with individuals in the community.
Any detainees who choose to refuse food or fluid,
including the reducing number of residents at Yarl’s Wood
who are currently refusing food, are closely monitored by
on-site healthcare professionals. Home Office staff will
not only ensure that detainees are informed about how
their actions may impact on their health, but make it
clear that we will continue to seek to progress their
case. The Government are committed to protecting the
welfare and dignity of those in detention and we will
always set the highest standards to ensure the safety and
well-being of detainees.
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The shadow Attorney General and I travelled to Yarl’s
Wood detention centre on Friday 23 February to inspect
conditions and speak to some of the people detained
there. The Minister will be aware that I have been
pressing for such access to the centre since the autumn
of 2016. The timing of our visit coincided with a hunger
strike by some of the detainees, who were protesting at
what they described as the inhumane conditions there. But
in response to my repeated inquiries, the authorities at
the detention centre, the Home Office, Serco and G4S said
categorically that there was no hunger strike. It now
seems that we were misled.
Is the Minister aware that newspaper reports show a
letter that has been sent to these women by the Home
Office? The letter has been reproduced in some media
outlets. It is a signed letter, on Home Office headed
paper, which begins by stating that
“the fact that you are currently refusing food and/or
fluid…may, in fact, lead to your case being accelerated”.
To some Opposition Members, this sounds like punitive
deportations for women who have dared to go on hunger
strike. Furthermore, I was contacted at the weekend by
lawyers and others attempting to prevent the deportation
of a young woman and her mother. This is wrong. The
personnel at Yarl’s Wood are paid for from the public
purse, yet Members of Parliament seem to have been misled
by officials. Now we learn that the Home Office is
apparently threatening these women with accelerated
deportation.
The Minister has a series of questions to answer. When
did she first know about the hunger strike? When did she
know of the existence of the threatening letters,
implying that deportation would be accelerated for those
continuing on hunger strike? Did she or her officials
approve these letters? How is it possible to accelerate
deportations and conform to natural justice, as surely
all cases are expedited in any event? Does the decision
for removal supersede any health concerns that a detainee
may have? Is the Minister aware that the primary demand
of the hunger strike is the inhumanity of what, in
practice, is indefinite detention? Finally, will the
Government, in line with their own policy, stop detaining
women who have been trafficked or sexually abused and
stop misleading this House about their detention of these
most vulnerable women?
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Nobody would intentionally mislead the House. I am sure
that the shadow Home Secretary was not suggesting that. I
think that the allegation was of what the Clerk would
consider to be a collective, rather than an individual,
character.
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The right hon. Lady has raised some very important
points. I will first clarify the circumstances in which a
letter is given to individuals who may be refusing food
or fluid while in detention. A letter will only be handed
to people after an extensive welfare interview, which
happens with a medical professional, and is used to
explain to individuals the very real risk that they are
putting themselves at by refusing food and fluid. We want
nobody in detention to be in that situation and it is
important that we explain to them the risks involved.
The letter is, in fact, part of official Home Office
guidance and was published on the gov.uk website in
November last year. It was agreed after consultation with
NHS England, Medical Justice, the Immigration Law
Practitioners Association and a range of non-governmental
organisations, because it is important that we get the
correct information to detainees who are choosing to
refuse food and fluid.
I was first aware that individuals at Yarl’s Wood were
refusing food and fluid at about the same time that the
right hon. Lady undertook her visit. Of course I regard
it as very serious. Nobody wants detainees to be at any
risk, but it is important that they should not regard
this as a route to preventing their removal from this
country. As I said clearly in my opening statement,
ensuring that individuals abide by immigration rules is
an essential part of our immigration system. I wish to do
nothing that encourages them to put their own health at
risk by suggesting that doing so might prevent their
removal from this country.
Indeed, there are some circumstances whereby people could
be prioritised, such as if we anticipated that somebody
needed escorts to be removed from the country, because
there is always a long wait for that service. We can also
talk to embassies to understand whether there is a
problem with papers from someone’s home country, and get
those expedited, so that the individual can be returned
to their home country as swiftly as possible.
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Accelerated processing would only be a threat if the
judicial process was not seen to be fair and independent.
Is it?
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My right hon. Friend will be aware that there is an
extensive judicial process, whereby individuals seeking
to stay in this country may apply to the first tier and,
indeed, the upper tier tribunal at any stage in the
process that they may apply for judicial review. We are
determined to make the immigration system as fair as we
possibly can, but also to uphold our rules.
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The large-scale, routine detention of thousands of human
beings in private prisons for an indeterminate period
simply at the discretion of immigration officers is,
frankly, a stain on our democracy and an affront to the
rule of law. This most recent horrible episode in a
detention facility is far from the first, as hon. Members
know, and it will not be the last unless there is radical
change. Why does the UK detain more than other European
countries? Why can every other EU country manage with a
time limit on immigration detention, but not the UK? Why
do the Government continue to detain vulnerable people,
including victims of torture, to the serious detriment of
their health and wellbeing? It is very welcome that the
shadow Home Secretary has brought this issue to the
House, but will the Government have the courage to allow
this House a binding vote and the chance to make it clear
that it is time for radical reform of the UK immigration
detention regime and that it is time for a limit?
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Immigration officials always consider individuals in
detention on a case-by-case basis and put their welfare
absolutely at the forefront. Some 95% of people with no
right to be in this country are managed within the
community. Only 5% will be within the immigration removal
centres at any one time. They are only there when there
is a realistic chance of removal, and we always seek to
ensure that they are removed as soon as possible.
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I congratulate my right hon. Friend on the superb job
that she is doing as Immigration Minister. My
constituents in Kettering want to see firm but fair
border controls, and the detention centre is absolutely
part of that. Will the Minister assure me that the 5% of
applicants who end up in a detention centre are there
because there is a very real risk that they will abscond
and we will not be able to deport them?
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There are several reasons why an individual might be in
immigration detention. First and foremost, those for whom
there is a realistic chance of removal from the UK may be
there for a short period, as we seek to get them to
removal as soon as possible. There are also those in
immigration detention who are foreign national offenders
and those who pose a risk to our society.
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I welcome the work that the shadow Home Secretary has
done to pursue this issue. I share her concern about the
state of Yarl’s Wood and some of the policies that
underpin it. I understand that the Immigration Minister
this weekend responded to calls from my hon. Friend the
Member for Stoke-on-Trent North (Ruth Smeeth) to prevent
the deportation of two of her constituents from being
accelerated as a result of one of them being on hunger
strike. But as well as that individual case, will the
Minister address the wider issue and confirm that no
individual should have their case or their deportation
accelerated or prioritised simply because they have gone
on hunger strike or made some kind of protest in response
to the very difficult conditions that they face? I am
sure that she would not want that kind of punitive action
to be taken in response to protest.
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We take the issue of individuals refusing food and fluid
very seriously indeed. We do not want any individual to
put their own health and wellbeing at risk. It is
important that we have an immigration policy that
includes detention, but that we administer it in as fair
a way as possible, always seeking to use detention as a
last resort. The right hon. Lady referred to a specific
case. I am not going to comment on individual people’s
immigration status on a case-by-case basis. However, it
is important that I am always prepared to listen when
Members ask me to review their cases.
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I thank the Minister for her statement and for the
assurances that she has given the House. It is right that
we have to have detention centres. Nobody likes them, but
they have to exist as part of a policy that is the right
policy to pursue. But will she be absolutely clear and
give us all an assurance that the welfare of
anybody—whatever their status may be—is always the
primary concern?
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Of course the welfare of individuals at any of our
immigration centres is of paramount importance. I assure
my right hon. Friend that Yarl’s Wood was inspected by
Her Majesty’s chief inspector of prisons between 5 and 16
June last year, and the report was published on 15
November. In addition, Yarl’s Wood was subject to a
review by Stephen Shaw, who reported in 2016. He is
currently looking at the recommendations that he made and
the progress that the Government—and Serco, our operative
there—have made in implementing them.
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My constituency has already said no to a part of the UK
Government’s immoral immigration policy—a short-term
holding facility near Glasgow airport. One of the main
reasons cited for that refusal was the UK’s indefinite
detention policy. The UK is the only country in the EU
that has indefinite detention. Is the Minister proud of
that policy?
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There is an automatic review of detention after a month
and at every recurring month. Individuals may apply for
bail at any time. It is important to reflect on the fact
that only 5% of the immigration offender population will
be found in detention at any one time. We seek to manage
them in the community wherever we possibly can. They will
be held in detention only when there is a real risk of
absconding or of public harm, or where we are seeking to
move somebody to removal as soon as possible.
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I have a huge amount of respect for the Minister, but her
statement that this happens only when people are at risk
of absconding is not one that I recognise from
immigration casework that I do every single day. A woman
in my constituency rang the police because of a threat to
kill her from a violent ex-husband. She was taken to
Yarl’s Wood, not to a place of safety. We detained a
woman who was a victim. She has now been given indefinite
leave to remain because her case was going through the
process. This is not an isolated case. Does the Home
Office think that it keeps vulnerable women who are at
risk of rape, sexual violence or domestic abuse safe by
basically deterring them from calling the police because
they will be sent to a detention centre?
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The hon. Lady will be aware that we have a very clear
policy on adults at risk in immigration detention. I do
not want any woman to be at risk of harm from either a
current partner or a former partner. She raised a
particular case. I urge her and all Members to bear in
mind that if such cases occur in their constituencies, I
will always want to look at them personally. We must
remember, however, that we have in this country an
immigration policy that seeks to implement the rules as
they are set out, and it is important that we are able to
uphold those rules at all times.
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In the Minister’s answer to the right hon. Member for
Broxtowe (Anna Soubry), she mentioned Stephen Shaw’s
second review of the detention of people in immigration
centres, particularly the experience of vulnerable
people, and said that he is looking at the Home Office’s
implementation of his first review. Has the second review
been concluded, and has she received the report on it? If
not, when does she expect to receive it, and when does
the Home Office expect to publish it?
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The honest answer is no, I have not yet received it, but
we anticipate it very shortly indeed.
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My hon. Friend the Member for Stoke-on-Trent North (Ruth
Smeeth) is travelling with the Defence Committee, but as
Opelo and her mother are her constituents, she has asked
me to put on record her thanks to the Minister for her
intervention at the weekend. She also asked me to put on
record her thanks to the Rev. Ashley Cooper and all those
at Swan Bank church for the welfare support they have
been giving to the immediate friends and family. Does the
Minister agree that the fact that Members of Parliament
have to resort to weekend telephone calls directly to
Ministers to try to stop individuals from being deported
before they have had their due process is a sign that the
immigration system in this country is simply failing?
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I said very clearly that I was not going to comment on
individual cases, but we do follow due process very
closely indeed. I put on record my thanks to the hon.
Gentleman’s colleague, the hon. Member for Stoke-on-Trent
North (Ruth Smeeth), to whom I spoke over the weekend and
with whom I am in regular contact. It is quite right that
she should be able to make those representations to me
at, quite frankly, whatever time of day.
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I am very proud to be the son of immigrants and proud of
this country’s record on supporting refugees and
immigrants. Does the Minister understand that at the
heart of her answer is an indifference, first, to
indefinite detention and, secondly, to the fact that many
women at Yarl’s Wood have been there for months and
months, running into years? That is why many of them are
refusing food. The possibility that the Government will
accelerate deportation on that basis must be contrary to
human rights. Can she satisfy the House that this
satisfies all the obligations that the Government have to
meet in their human rights record and that it is not
cruel and unusual punishment?
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It is important to reflect on the fact that detention
plays an important part in our immigration system and
will continue to do so. Of course we put the welfare and
wellbeing of individuals who are in detention at Yarl’s
Wood, and at every other centre in this country, at the
forefront of our policies. It is important to remember,
however, that some people in detention, including foreign
national offenders, are there because if they were in the
community they would have very high potential to do harm.
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A constituent of mine was detained in Yarl’s Wood last
summer. She was at risk of losing her eyesight due to a
serious eye condition that had already left her blind in
one eye and, if left untreated for a short time, risked
her going blind in the other. Despite people being made
aware of this information, she was left for some time
before being seen by a nurse. In the end, my office had
to intervene directly to ensure that urgent medical
assistance was provided to my constituent, to avoid her
losing her sight. This appalling case is one of many.
Will the Minister make an assessment and overall review
of the conditions that women in Yarl’s Wood are subject
to?
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Upon detention, individuals at Yarl’s Wood are given
access to a healthcare professional within two hours and
then have the ability to make an appointment with a
general practitioner within 24 hours. It is really
important that we provide healthcare to all those in
detention. That is why it is available 24 hours a day,
seven days a week, and referral onwards to external
healthcare services is also available. The hon. Lady
asked whether I would review welfare at Yarl’s Wood. In
fact, that is the job of the independent monitoring
board, the independent inspector, and of course Stephen
Shaw, whom we have asked to go back to review the
recommendations that he made two years ago and provide us
with an update on progress.
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How can the Minister say that the justification for
detention is severe risk of harm or women absconding when
so many of them are very quickly, or ultimately, released
back into the community and sometimes go round the loop
of “detention and release, detention and release” on a
number of occasions?
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In upholding our immigration rules, we seek to assist
those who have no right to be here to return home,
whether on a voluntary basis or indeed, on occasion, by
force. It is really important that we have an immigration
system that is robust. We do not have indefinite
detention. The hon. Lady will have heard me say that 92%
of those held are released within four months and 63% are
released within a month. It is important that we have a
system where we can be confident that when we are able
move people to removal, we have the capacity to do so.
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I want to put on record my support for the work that the
shadow Home Secretary has been doing on this issue and
for the work of my hon. Friend the Member for
Stoke-on-Trent North (Ruth Smeeth), who has fought
tirelessly for her constituents. I am grateful that the
Minister has listened and agreed to review the case. For
many of us, the trouble with this is that we are talking
about an environment where we know that two thirds of the
women in Yarl’s Wood have experienced rape or sexual
torture and that 85% of them are then released back, not
deported. Does the Minister recognise that, rather than
continuing to keep Yarl’s Wood open, there may be not
only cheaper but much more compassionate and humane ways
in which we can manage our immigration system that would
speak to the best of British values?
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The hon. Lady will have heard me say that 95% of
immigration offenders are in the community and only a
very small proportion—5%—are in detention. However,
detention does play an important part. We will keep
people in detention where there is a realistic prospect
of removal and where they might cause harm out in the
community. It is important that we retain that facility.
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At Yarl’s Wood and many institutions like it, vulnerable
people are being held for long periods, despite the fact
that the majority of them have committed no crime. Does
the Minister agree that there must be an urgent review of
the UK’s detention system?
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I think that I have been very clear this afternoon that,
although we regard detention as a last resort, it is an
important part of our suite of immigration policies. We
use detention to enable us to remove people from this
country, to make sure that those who might cause harm in
our communities are kept away from society and on
occasions when we are seeking to remove foreign national
offenders as quickly as we can.
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How many people in Yarl’s Wood are currently on suicide
watch?
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We keep the welfare of detainees under very close
supervision, and I can reassure the hon. Gentleman that a
reducing number of people are choosing to refuse food and
fluid. Of course, where people have mental health issues
or there are concerns about their health, it is
absolutely right that we keep them under very close
supervision.
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