Thread. As the #RefugeeBanBill faces scrutiny from the Lords today the Home Secretary and Justice Secretary have taken one of their pet papers to spread yet more misinformation. 1/ #r4today thetimes.co.uk/article/b37b29…
First things first. Asylum and refugees are only mentioned once in the Conservative 2019 Manifesto. As opposed to being a "manifesto commitment, the #RefugeeBanBill would directly contravene the only one they made. 2/ conservatives.com/our-plan/conse…
The Home and Justice Secretaries appear to be deliberately misleading people by conflating the immigration and asylum systems. None of this is exactly correct. Costs involved have been inflated by this government, not number of people seeking asylum, which it's legal to do so. 3/
This government's own figures show that the vast majority of those seeking asylum in the UK are recognised as needing it, and can only seek it via irregular routes because they have no other options. 4/ commonslibrary.parliament.uk/research-brief….
Take for example refugees from Sudan. Already they form one of the largest groups seeking asylum in the UK, as with many of the relatively small number of people who seek it here, because of historic ties. Yet no routes exist for them. 5/ theguardian.com/world/2023/may…
Oh good, didn't take us long to get to the "young men" line. Funnily enough, being a young man doesn't preclude you from also being a refugee. Precluding them from seeking asylum however does risk meaning that women and children also can't do so. 6/ washingtonpost.com/outlook/2021/0…
Also let's quickly address this "safe country" line. Safety is subjective. You or I may feel safe in a country where someone who has lost everything and fled for their life may not. The Home Office's own analysis recognises this. 7/ google.com/url?sa=t&sourc…
By the way, that same analysis also shows that "deterrents" not only don't work, but actually increase the risks of exploitation, thereby only benefitting gangs. They don't remove the reasons people come to the UK seeking safety, they just make them easier to prey on. 8/
Granted, how a question is framed does make an impact on public opinion, but overall, and consistently, the British public actually supports providing asylum, something which the #RefugeeBanBill essentially ends in the UK. 9/ yougov.co.uk/topics/politic…
This, in particular, is, to put it politely, grossly disingenuous. Rather than meeting obligations to separated children, this bill will roll back protections, allowing for their detention and putting them at risk of even greater exploitation. 10/ theguardian.com/society/2023/m…
This is a rather short paragraph with which to gloss over the not insignificant matter of how the bill would massively contravene quite a number of the UK's legal obligations, under domestic and international law, including the Refugee Convention. 11/ unhcr.org/uk/media/unhcr…
Setting aside the many, many, issues of sending people to a de-facto dictatorship which this government's own officials have warned is unsafe, this is a fiction. The Rwanda policy specifically prohibits asylum applications made remotely, and would prevent other legal claims. 12/
Another fiction. We've already seen, as with routes for Afghans, how limited existing options are. This bill does not bring in additional routes. Instead it kicks them down the road until it is already in force and too late for anyone to do anything. 13/ independent.co.uk/news/uk/home-n…
There is nothing "humane" or "fair" about this bill. It is an illegal, inhumane act of performative cruelty, which this government's own previous analysis shows will only increase exploitation. I would also urge the @UKHouseofLords to look at it closely, and scrap it. 14/
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I am actually begging @BBCNews to at least attempt a little thing called "journalism" when reporting on people seeking asylum, rather than just being a Home Office stenographer. At least try and include context, rather than just quoting stats. #r4today. 1/ bbc.com/news/articles/…
Here's the thing, small boat crossings tend to follow the same pattern, even if numbers change, due to something called "the weather", shocking I know. Numbers change for small boats though as other policies kick in preventing people using alternative, safer, routes. #r4today 2/
For example, restrictions on visas have forced more people into using irregular routes, and as there is no such thing as a visa to seek asylum they have absolutely no alternative but to use the irregular routes. #r4today 3/
Yesterday four people, including a child, died crossing channel. On Monday at least 48 people died reaching Djiboutian. At least 68,123 people died trying to reach safety in the last decade. We need cooperation to make it safer to seek asylum, not harder. standard.co.uk/news/politics/…
People know the risks they are taking by using irregular routes. Most aren't looking at social media thinking, "I was going to stay here and face almost certain death, persecution or abuse, but now I have seen this TikTok video I'll risk my life on dangerous routes."
We've seen similar policies play out before, e.g. when the previous government tried it with Albania. They just don't work. With asylum, people tend to choose the country they seek it in for highly personal reasons, primarily existing ties. They aren't risking their lives for fun
Setting aside the illegality of the Rwanda Policy, which Germany can't get around by just passing a law to say that an active dictatorship is "safe", and the inhumanity of it, the plan is even more unworkable for the continent than the UK. 1/ #r4today bbc.com/news/articles/…
Okay, first off, the numbers issue. Rwanda, a country of the size of Wales and the most densely populated country in continental Africa, has the capacity to take and process claims of about 200 people per year. Simple maths shows it is pointless. 2/
It has also been tried before. Israel attempted a similar scheme, which led to about 4,000 people being trafficked from Rwanda into Europe within a matter of weeks of them being dumped there, and that scheme was voluntary not forced. 3/
THREAD: Much as I personally believe Nigel Farage is a racist and revels in spreading hate, I have some issues with the way people are saying the far-right riots we are seeing right now are the #FarageRiot. It's too simplistic and ignores decades of hostile rhetoric. 1/
Last time I brought this topic up I was accused of "both siding" things, so let's quickly clarify this. Both siding would be if I was trying to say there are "good people' on the far-right. I am not. Sorry, "legitimate concerns" went out the window when violent attacks started 2/
I am not defending, or deflecting, from what Farage has done, The point here is that when you make him the focus you risk ignoring the decades of hostile, and racist, anti-migrant, rhetoric which have embedded this scapegoating of migrants in public consciousness. 3/
Long thread; A lot of the violence we have seen over the last few days has been stoked by years of misinformation about migration, often from many of the politicians condemning it now. So, let's address some of that misinformation. 1/
Crime: In Britain, there is no correlation between higher levels of immigration and increased violent crime. Migrants are statistically, and proportionally, less likely to report crime though, and more likely to face hate crimes. 2/
Now, I know that people have bought into the whole "grooming gangs" line, but, again, this is a myth. It's the "frequency illusion" in action. The reality is that grooming gangs are far more likely to be white, British, men. 3/
. ucl.ac.uk/news/2020/dec/…
Since I wrote this thread on @UKLabour's Asylum and Immigration policies several things have been depressingly clear. First off, things are going to get worse. Cooper's announcement of increased immigration raids, and the blinkered defence of them by some, shows this. 1/
The second is how much harder it is going to be for organisations and individuals fighting for migrants' rights. A lot of support over the last 14 years wasn't "pro-migrants rights". It was "anti-conservative". Obviously this isn't new though. 2/
We saw shades of it after the Brexit referendum. People who claimed to be progressive pushing a "good/bad migrants" narrative dividing EU and non-EU migrants. I saw first hand a lot of the hypocrisy of those individuals then, and see it repeating on an even larger scale now. 3/