Thursday, 3 March 2022

Letter to supporters

a letter to supporters

March 2022

Hi there,

Since the Ukraine crisis began, Positive Action in Housing has been inundated with letters, and offers of volunteering and shelter, for those fleeing the conflict in Ukraine. We appreciate your generosity and kindness. To volunteer, offer a spare room (or property), give a donation, or get involved in other ways, see the links at the end of this email.

In response to the latest crisis, we are able to offer shelter in the homes of our volunteer hosts
 through our existing Room for Refugees network. Our Emergency Relief Fund also has the capacity to distribute crisis support, and clothes/food vouchers to people in need in the U.K. We accept self referrals, and referrals from partner refugee, homelessness or emergency aid organisations. For more info, please send an email or see the links below.

The Nationality and Borders Bill 


As Ukraine's refugee crisis unfolded, the Nationality and Borders Bill was debated in the House of Lords, seeking to introduce measures for asylum seekers without a visa or passport who attempt to reach the UK - including those fleeing Ukraine - to be sent abroad for "offshore detention".

It would also allow for illegal and dangerous pushbacks at sea; those who do manage to reach the UK would face criminal penalties with prison sentences of up to four years. The provisions would violate obligations under international refugee law, human rights law and the duty to rescue people at sea in distress. 

Dubbed the "anti refugee bill", the  Bill contained grand designs for a multibillion pound offshore processing centre, with more taxpayers money making its way to Home Office contractors.  Of course, the Home Office itself is riddled with incompetence, discrimination and administrative delays, and is pleading for reform. This Bill is designed to deter those seeking refuge here after being forced to flee their homes in often unimaginable circumstances.

So thank the Lords for inflicting impressive, fatal blows to the Bill's more fascistic tendencies, voting overwhelmingly to delete Clauses 9 and 11 of the Bill, to ensure it complied with Refugee Convention. By 204 votes to 126, the Lords voted to remove clause 11 from the Bill. The clause would effectively create a two-tier asylum system based on whether asylum seekers arrived in the UK with or without official entry clearance.

Lord Kerr of Kinlochard told the House of Lords that keeping clause 11 in the Bill would betray the UK's values and trash its reputation, and could kill the Refugee Convention. Lord Brown of Eaton-under-Heywood, a former Law Lord and Justice of the Supreme Court, called it a "grotesque piece of legislation" and said clause 11 would see the UK turning its back on refugees such as those currently fleeing Ukraine.

The Lords also voted to remove the deeply controversial clause 9 from the Bill by 209 votes to 173. Clause 9 would allow the Home Secretary to remove a person's British citizenship without notice. By 218 votes to 140, the Lords voted for adding a new clause to the Bill to ensure that it is enacted in ways that comply with the UK's obligations under the 1951 Refugee Convention and the 1967 Protocol relating to the Status of Refugees. In the final vote of the night, the Lords voted by 112 to 89 to give asylum seekers the right to work if they have been waiting for 6 months or more for a decision. And today,  the Lords voted to remove clause 28 of the Bill allowing UK to offshore asylum seekers.


This is a decisive victory for Refugee Convention rights, removing plainly unlawful and harmful provision in the Bill to allow some refugees to be stripped of their rights to asylum even after proving their entitlement and status. The Home Secretary stands shamed for introducing plans in the Bill to penalise and criminalise refugees based on their method of arrival, and to give ministers power to strip British citizenship without notice under Clause 9. 

In situations of acute crisis, governments should act in good faith not to obstruct individuals' rights to leave their country and to seek asylum. Situations like Ukraine illustrate how visa restrictions and penalties imposed on airlines for transporting undocumented people can and does prevent many from boarding a plane to safety. 

As uncertainty continues in our world, it is up to civic society, and decent people everywhere to reach out, connect to our own humanity and do good. Our charity's support base continues to grow and now number several thousand people and organisations from all walks of life and experience. We stand ready to help in a crisis. We appreciate your messages of support and thoughts so do drop a line.

Finally, the image above is a timely reminder of the dangers of forgetting the refugee conventions that protect us all.  During WWII, Jewish people in Budapest were brought to the edge of the Danube, ordered to remove their shoes, and shot, falling into the water below. 60 pairs of iron shoes now line the river's bank, a ghostly memorial to the victims. I would urge you to send this to UK Government ministers and explain its significance.


Yours sincerely,


Robina Qureshi
Chief Executive Officer
Positive Action in Housing

www.positiveactionh.org 




 
Donate

about us

Positive Action in Housing is a non governmental, independent, anti-racist homelessness and human rights charity (SC027577) dedicated to supporting women, children and men from refugee and migrant backgrounds to rebuild their lives. We believe in a society where everyone has the right to live safe and dignified lives, free from poverty, homelessness or inequality.
donate
Offer a spare room
Room for Refugees
Casework Referrals
Other ways to give
about us
volunteer
impact report
blog
Google Translate