An improvement, but the plan is still only a three year visa. People still need the right to seek asylum and be provided with long-term assistance. Not to mention, among other things, the real risks of exploitation which the sponsorship scheme opens up.
And this is a perfect example of why what is needed is for visas to be waived, not for a new visa scheme to be put. Home Office bureaucracy has been destroying people's lives for decades. Something tells me that increasing it isn't the way forward.
We have seen now schemes such as the seasonal workers scheme, you all remember, that was the one immigration minister Kevin Foster said Ukrainian refugees could use, have led to worker exploitation. This scheme risks being even worse.
Making someone fleeing a warzone effectively reliant on a sponsor, making any reliant on a sponsor, makes them defacto reliant on that sponsor. Obviously we need to look at the fine detail, but based on existing schemes this opens vulnerable people up to abuse.
It's also a highly cynical conflation of the asylum and immigration systems, which many people don't realise are very separate. It's a base level way to ensure that people can be denied asylum and long-term support, because doing so would show how inhumane the #antirefugeebill is
It also leaves a lot of questions unanswered. What happens to people on the new visa scheme in three years if they still aren't able to return to Ukraine? What happens if sponsors can't accommodate them after a few months? It's shifting the government's responsibility onto others
And as highlighted by Refugee Council, what support will people be provided, because failing to meet the needs of "traumatised and vulnerable people* carries significant dangers, not just of things like long-term trauma, but also being more likely to be targeted by traffickers.
For more issues with the scheme, this is a good thread by @LouCalvey breaking them down and why many people focused on migrants rights and refugee protection have concerns.
And then there is this from @RefugeesAtHome, who know what they are talking about on this. The scheme comes across as an ill-thought through, potentially dangerous, shiny bauble to wave and say the government is doing something to stop people complaining.
And this from @Love146UK. If the scheme is to work, refugees and host families need to be provided with genuine, specialist, support, and that would be the case with just waiving visas as well. The risk is that this scheme is used to avoid that.
As @sabir_zazai highlights, there is also an element of hypocrisy in the scheme, which could reinforce the government's proposals for a "two tier asylum system" as included in the #NationalityAndBordersBill
THREAD: One of the main arguments which the UK uses for avoiding taking refugees is that they can seek asylum in "safe countries" before they arrive in Britain. That fact that "first safe country" doesn't actually exist in law is irrelevant. 1/
That is why it is so important not only to highlight the failures of the UK to provide protection, but also the risks posed to many asylum seekers in other countries, such as France and across the EU. 2/ hrw.org/world-report/2…
The EU's response to Ukrainian refugees has been astounding, and a direct contrast to the utter shambles which has been the UK's, but this really does highlight the unequal treatment of refugees within the EU as much as anything else. 3/
Thread: Conflicts are one of the main drivers of child trafficking. For years the UK government has conflated "trafficking", which can lead to long-term exploitation and "smuggling", which is predominantly transactional. 1/ bbc.co.uk/news/world-eur…
If the Government rejects amendments made by the House of Lords, the #nationalityandbordersbill will make it harder for trafficking survivors to come forward, by placing time limits on how long they have to present evidence and reveal the level of trauma they've been through. 2/
As the #Ukraine️ war continues we will see the tragic and inevitable rise of trafficking in the area, particularly with children. As it stands the UK government's proposed legislation would see them risk being treated as adults, disbelieved, and criminalised. 3/
Thread: Refugees don't need visas. Under international refugee law they cannot be penalised for their manner of entry, which is just one way in which the government's proposals for #NationalityAndBordersBill would violate international law. It isn't so simple though. 1/ #r4today
You know all those stories you see about "small boat crossings"? The politicians and pundits who claim that anyone crossing the channel is an "economic migrant"? Yeah, now you see with the failure of the UK to support those fleeing the #UkraineRussianWar why it was never true. 2/
It doesn't matter where someone is fleeing, the basic reasons for trying to reach the UK remain the same, language and family/friendship ties. Most refugees do remain in their regions of origin, not always by choice, but some don't. 3/
Lord's debating age assessments in the #NationalityAndBordersBill, and in an entirely predictable turn of events Lord Green, of Migration Watch, misrepresents data to try and push an amendment which would see anyone who "looks 18+" automatically treated as an adult. 1/
This would obviously mean that inevitably more children would be held in adult facilities and denied their legal rights to protection. It would also increase the number of age disputes, which he uses to justify his argument. 2/
What his use of figures fails to take into account are, the number of those age disputes overturned, that many were conducted using "short assessments, which have been found to be unlawful, and the increase in use of age assessments by Home Office to attempt to deny asylum. 3/
THREAD: There is a persistent narrative that the UK has always had a "welcoming attitude to #refugees". There's a problem with this though, it is a nostalgic myth. In reality there are few differences in the way the UK acts now, and how it did in the past. Little of it good. 1/
It generally seems to be accepted that by the outbreak of World War two the UK had taken approximately 70,000 Jewish refugees, which sounds a lot until you realise that it is estimated that they rejected about half a million. 2/ theguardian.com/uk/2002/jun/08…
Overall it's estimated about 80,000 people were offered refuge in UK, including nearly 10,000 through the Kinderstransport. Good huh. Well there were approximately 60 million displaced people, including 12 million Germans, so not brilliant to be honest 3/ gale.com/intl/essays/ra…
Before anyone gets too optimistic about this, Patel plays semantics. Just look at the language for one thing. "Look at", "investigating". That's a far cry from doing anything. "Ten thousand applications" doesn't mean "granted ten thousand visas". #r4today
Aaaand there we have it. The UK is far too focused on denying refugees safety, for example the #NationalityAndBordersBill being pushed through at the moment would criminalise Ukrainian refugees. It was highly unlikely it would genuinely do something to help. 2/ #r4today
It is hardly shocking given Patel's, and the UK government as a whole's, track record that they aren't actually talking about providing support for refugees, and instead are just alluding to one of the already woefully poor routes they have created. 3/