|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Europe
: Britain
Britain: Labour introduces ID cards and routine detention
for asylum seekers
By Chris Marsden
3 November 2001
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email the
author
This week Britains Home Secretary David Blunkett announced
new anti-asylum seeker legislation that poses dangers to the democratic
rights of all UK citizens.
Blunkett was aided in announcing the new legislation by a supportive
media, which focused attention on the decision to abandon the
heavily criticised voucher scheme for asylum seekers and the system
of dispersing refugees around the country.
Payment of living costs in vouchers instead of cash has stigmatised
asylum seekers, while their dispersal away from London and Southeastusually
to poor housing estates owned by local councils or housing trustshas
led to racial attacks and even deaths.
But Blunketts alternative scheme does not represent a
progressive alternative to Labours previous failed and divisive
policy. Instead he has largely adopted the proposals of the Conservative
opposition, leading former shadow Home Secretary Ann Widdecombe
to describe Blunketts measures as a Damascene conversion.
Labour is to set up a national network of induction, accommodation
and removal centres, alongside the introduction of ID smart
cards for all asylum seekers that will include the bearers
photograph and fingerprint.
The induction centres will accommodate new applicants for two
to 10 days, enabling screening and health checks. Afterwards,
accommodation centres will house those allowed to pursue their
asylum claim. It is this intent to isolate refugees that in fact
removes the need for vouchers, rather than a reinstatement of
cash benefits. Those refusing an accommodation centre place will
not be eligible for any further support.
Removal centres will accommodate those who are about to be
deported, as opposed to prisonsthe use of which has been
subjected to censure by civil rights groups.
Blunkett called the new system more robust but less socially
divisive. It certainly falls within the first category,
but not the second. The government intends to build four accommodation
centres to house 3,000 asylum seekers and an unspecified number
of short-term induction places. The number of removal centre places
will rise to 4,000 from the present 2,800.
The Home Secretary told parliament, At the heart of my
asylum proposals is the resumption that from the moment someone
presents themselves, they will be tracked as well as supported
(emphasis added)
He tried to gloss over the element of compulsion within the
proposed accommodation centres, with promises that asylum seekers
will not be detained. However he added that they would
be subject to a residence requirement and they will not
be offered alternative forms of support, repeating himself
for emphasis minutes later with the words, Those refusing
to take up such a place will disqualify themselves from support.
Blunkett also made clear Labours intention to speed up
the removal of refugees found to have no valid claim for asylum,
by further restricting their legal rights. He would cut
out multiple opportunities for delay [and] streamline any further
right of appeal, limited to a point of law.
The Tories naturally sought to make some political capital,
since Labour had adopted their proposals. For their part, the
Liberal Democrats gave full backing to the changes, Home Affairs
spokesman Simon Hughes said they deserved a huge welcome.
In Edinburgh, the Scottish Nationalist Partys Kenny Gibson
created an outcry when he called the proposed smart ID card the
modern equivalent of the yellow star used in Nazi
Germany to identify Jews. Gibson was attacked for this reference,
but there is little doubt that the proposed ID card will stigmatise
asylum seekers. And it will do more than this. As Blunkett indicated,
the smart card is intended to enable an asylum seekers every
movement to be tracked.
Labour has previously been thwarted in its efforts to establish
a national system of ID cards. It last mooted the idea as a proposal
to combat terrorism, following September 11, which it then ditched.
So the government regards their introduction for any section of
the population as setting a welcome precedent. Simon Hughes showed
he was aware of this, when he asked Blunkett, Does the announcement
of the replacement of vouchers with smart cards herald a general
movement to entitlement cards not just for immigrants but for
people as a whole?
Concern has been expressed over some aspects of Labours
proposals by asylum and civil rights advocates, though most congratulated
Blunkett for abandoning the voucher system and tended to give
the government the benefit of the doubt over the non-compulsory
nature of the proposed accommodation centres.
Oxfams Justin Forsyth applauded the Governments
good sense in recognising the inhumanity and unfairness
of the voucher system, while expressing his hope that residence
in accommodation centres should not be compulsory... Asylum
seekers should be able to choose to live in the community with
friends or relatives with full access to cash benefits.
The Refugee Council also praised the removal of the voucher
system, but stated its concerns that the introduction of
these so-called smart cards will exacerbate the problems that
asylum seekers already face in accessing basic services to which
they are entitled. The Council also had concerns over the
degree of independence of asylum seekers within accommodation
centres and how long they would be held.
John Wadham of Liberty, the civil rights group, said of the
proposed ID cards, The danger is that yesterdays proposals
envisage a wider requirement for these cards. It must not become
a requirement that people need them to access essential public
services such as health, nor must the police be able to stop people
and demand to see the card. Any such wider use would risk generating
further discrimination against non-white people, including millions
of British citizens... The proposed smartcard must adhere to these
clear guaranteed restrictions. This must not become a backdoor
route to introducing national ID cards.
Sue Willman, a solicitor at Hammersmith and Fulham Community
Law Centre, and co-author of Support for Asylum Seekers: A
Guide to Legal and Welfare Rights, warned, The emphasis
on speeding up asylum claims and appeals also raises the question
whether people are going to get an Article Six fair hearing under
the Human Rights Act 1998 because quicker decision making tends,
when the Home Office is involved, to mean poorer decision making.
Sam Newman, the lead officer for asylum seekers at Devon County
Council, said of the proposed accommodation centres that while
locations had yet to be finalised, it is understood they could
include former airforce bases. He warned, Dumping hundreds
and hundreds of such people into ex-military camps will create
great difficulty for them and the local community. With them living
in these centres, which could be miles from a town or city, it
may be difficult to get access to the services they need such
as health care and English tuition.
See Also:
Britain: Labour government
plans to introduce internment
[19 October 2001]
Britain: Racist attacks escalate
[28 September 2001]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |