Thread: I regret to inform you that the Home Office is at it again, spreading misleading, and at times just plain false information, while also using refugees as cover to penalise vulnerable asylum seekers. 1/
Straight off the bat, this is blatantly false. There are a multitude of ways that an asylum seeker can, legally under international law, enter the UK on their own in order to apply for asylum. Ways which the government is looking to penalise them for. 2/
No-one is against the prosecution of smugglers or traffickers. They abuse and exploit asylum seekers, but they aren't the only ones being prosecuted and included in these figures. The asylum seekers themselves are, and that doesn't stop the gangs. 3/
Comparing it to the drug trade is actually a pretty good analogy, although not in the way the Home Office intends. How well has the decades long "war on drugs" worked, in large part because the serious players are so far removed they don't get caught? 4/
Asylum seekers are often forced into driving the boats by gangs because the gangs know that if they are caught then they can just force someone else to drive the next one. It has minimal impact on their actual operations. 5/
So how do you crack down on gangs? Well, you remove their "supply" by providing safe and legal routes for asylum seekers. Even here though the Home Office is being more than a little disingenuous with its boast. 6/
First off, resettlement globally accounts for about 4%/5% of refugees, and that number is dropping. In the UK last year there was a 93% drop in resettlement routes, with only 353, being provided resettled. 7/
Resettlement is great, when it is available. Problem is, for a lot of refugees it isn't an option. Either the routes don't exist, or they don't have the opportunity to take advantage of them. When you are fleeing for your life you may not have time to fill in forms and wait. 8/
So what is the solution? People aren't going to stop trying to reach safety. If anything the last year's increase in channel crossings has demonstrated that when other routes are closed people are forced into taking more dangerous ones. 9/
Well, for starters, being able to process applications in France would remove quite a lot of the need for many to rely on smugglers. Opening actual safe and legal routes, not PR stunts, to facilitate the entry of more asylum seekers would likewise have the same effect. 10/
Patel's new plan doesn't do that though. The new routes are hazy at best, and still apparently limited. The plan ignores international law and the drivers for people seeking safety, which may mean France et al aren't for them, and just forces more people into hands of gangs 11/

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More from @stand_for_all

15 Jun
Thread: As the @ukhomeoffice has taken it upon itself to hijack the #RefugeeWeek hashtag, it's important to remember that not only do resettlement places globally account for a tiny fraction of refugees, it is also not illegal to seek asylum. 1/ ImageImage
Patel is attempting to make a distinction between those who use resettlement routes and those who seek asylum by other means. There is no such distinction under international law though. A refugee is permitted to enter a country via any means necessary without being penalised. 2/
Patel's #NewPlanForImmigration sets in place penalties though. It automatically creates a two tier system, a system which directly contravenes international refugee law to which the UK is a signatory. It also ignores the myriad of reasons someone may become a refugee. 3/
Read 23 tweets
5 Jun
Numbers of asylum seekers are down on previous years. They are at their lowest levels since 2014. That seems like kind of an important point to flag #r4today rather than making out that suddenly the Home Office is overwhelmed.
IT IS NOT ILLEGAL TO CROSS THE CHANNEL OR SEEK ASYLUM. It is illegal to penalize an asylum seeker for their manner of entry. #r4today
"Official" resettlement routes account for about 4% of asylum seekers globally. Last year the UK offered about 350 places on its resettlement routes. With other routes closed of course there is going to be an increase in channel crossings.
Read 7 tweets
4 Jun
THREAD: With growing cross-party support to ensure that the #foreignaid budget is reinstated to 0.7% of GDP it's worth acknowledging that, particularly now, there are reasons people may oppose it, and equally important reasons for funding it. 1/
The reality is that the majority of voters support cutting foreign aid, and it's not hard to see why. The UK has one of the highest levels of income inequality out of OECD countries. About 15 million people in poverty etc. 2/
The whole "trade not aid" and "charity begin at home" arguments cut through. Of course they do. If you are struggling to buy food then why would you support the government sending money abroad to help other countries? 3/
Read 23 tweets
3 Jun
Deeply depressing and, as Denmark is a signatory to UN refugee convention, highly illegal. This is a direct attack against refugee rights. Even more concerning though is it risks setting a precedent all too many countries will try and follow unless Denmark is held to account.
Got to say though, this is more than a little hypocritical on the part of the EU commission considering the externalisation policies of the EU and its track record of funding some fairly despicable regimes in order to avoid taking asylum seekers. Image
Asylum seekers have a legal right under international law to cross countries and enter by any means without penalty when seeking asylum. States also have responsibilities as to manner in which they are treated. It appears as though Denmark is absolving itself of those duties.
Read 4 tweets
3 Jun
Seeing a lot of "at least they had accomodation. What about homeless veterans" arguments when discussing #NapierBarracks. UK spends £392million on immigration enforcement. Money better spent on helping the homeless than imprisoning asylum seekers. 1/
Camps such as Napier cost more to set up and operate than pretty much any other form of accommodation for asylum seekers, but make for a great PR stunt. Asylum seekers are denied right to work and provided with an allowance of £39.63 pw. They are denied council accommodation. 2/
You really want to get angry that people fleeing war and persecution are provided with assistance when homeless people here aren't, then get angry about the money wasted on their detention and denial of rights. 3/
Read 8 tweets
3 Jun
Drops of 24% applications, 58% being processed, 93% resettlement options. 71% increase in asylum seekers waiting more than 6 months for an initial decision. Irresponsible reporting by @thetimes to not mention that when reporting on channel crossings in such an inflammatory manner Image
Even the Daily Mail bothered reporting on the declines in asylum applications and available routes and instead the Times decided to once again rehash the same tired comments from likes of @NatalieElphicke calling for the UK to violate international law and refugee rights. ImageImage
The pandemic has highlighted that when you deny people other routes they will be forced into the hands of gangs as they attempt to reach safety. All Elphicke's proposals would do is strengthen the gangs by giving them a never ending supply of desperate people to exploit.
Read 6 tweets

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