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WSWS : News
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Britain: government targets child asylum seekers
By Liz Smith
23 February 2008
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Under the guise of more compassionate treatment for children,
the Home Office Border and Immigration Agency is tightening up
procedures to forcibly remove an extremely vulnerable group of
children to their countries of origin.
Proposals outlined in its document, Better Outcomes:
The Way Forward Improving the Care for Unaccompanied Asylum Seeker
Children [UASC], are the outcome of a period
of consultation with key agencies such as childrens charities,
health and Local Authorities. In spite of concerns raised by these
organisations, the Home Office seems determined to step up the
persecution of these vulnerable children in order to satisfy its
policy objective of scapegoating asylum seekers and refugees for
all of societys ills.
Currently, approximately 3,000 children a year arrive in Britain
seeking asylum. Many come from war-torn areas, including Iraq
and Afghanistan. They travel long journeys to arrive in Britain,
are often beaten on the way, and do not know where they are going
to end up.
The proposals are a fundamental reform of the way UASC are
supported and managed. Currently, their rights are safeguarded
by existing childrens legislation, which treats an unaccompanied
child under the age of 18 the same as a Looked After Childwith
the appropriate Local Authority having a duty of care until they
are at least 18 years old and often beyond. UASC are currently
given exceptional leave to remain (ELR) until they reach this
age.
One of the proposals is for the responsibility for funding
UASC care leavers currently carried out by the Department for
Children, Schools and Families (DCSF) to move to the Home Office,
thus increasing the economic pressure on UASC to return to their
country of origin or disappear.
The Home Office claims this will make it easier to safeguard
children at the same time as managing the immigration system effectively.
It is concerned that too many young people disappear when their
claim to remain is refused once they are 18.
The new proposals seek to centralise the dispersal of UASC,
who often arrive at the key airports and ports in the South-East
of England, and send them for care in regional centres in designated
Local Authorities. Alongside this will be a more rigourous approach
to age assessment that is currently carried out by each Local
Authority. A child will be screened at a unit before being sent
to one of the Local Authorities. One of the most contentious aspects
of this proposal is the use of dental records in determining age,
which has not been ruled out.
On the basis that this will keep children safe from harm, the
Home Office also argues for better procedures for identifying
and supporting UASC who are victims of trafficking. The document
uses the issue of trafficking to tighten up legislation by arguing
that we need to recognise as a rule the needs of children
are best served by being with their families. Not once does
the document pose the question as to why families would risk sending
their children across to the other side of the world if they did
not face profound problems and hardships.
The document assumes that the children who arrive unaccompanied
do so in an organised fashion. Some are brought as
relatives and then left somewhere where they know
they will be cared for. Others travel in the backs of lorries,
not knowing which countries they are travelling through and losing
siblings on the way. For many of these children, contact with
families cannot be maintained due to the precarious nature of
their personal circumstances.
This point was underscored by Donna Covey, chief executive
of the Refugee Council, who said, Were pleased the
Home Office has recognised that it needs to improve the way they
safeguard and protect these children. However, we have serious
concerns about some of the proposals outlined, and we oppose government
plans to forcibly return children to their country of origin.
The government should not try to force any child to return against
their wishes where their safety and welfare cannot be guaranteed.
Covet continued, Any way forward has to reflect the experiences
of these children; some are trafficked, some have been politically
active, some have been the victims of violence, including torture
and sexual violence. These are not children who come here seeking
a better life, with their families waiting for them in peaceful
homes. Many of them are children from war zones.
While we recognise age assessment procedures need to
be improved, it is clear from the consultation responses and subsequent
work that x-rays are not going to be the answer. We hope that
further consultation will lead to this idea being dropped altogether.
Syd Bolton from the Medical Foundation for the Care of Victims
of Torture said in response to the proposals, Childrens
experiences of torture and serious harm take time and expertise
to explore and explain. They need to come to terms with their
traumatic pasts whilst at the same time struggling in their present
lives with a complex and often inadequate legal and welfare situation.
The only way in which tortured and seriously harmed children
and young people have any chance to recover psychologically is
through care systems and decision-making processes which emphasise
their long term welfare and best interests, not an approach which
fits with a hard line immigration control message.
Recent research by the childrens charity Barnardos
has found that an estimated 100,000 vulnerable children are condemned
to a childhood of poverty, uncertainty and fear after being caught
up in a UK asylum backlog that may not be cleared until 2011.
This appalling situation is being cynically used by the government
and the Home Office to introduce legislation that will intensify
the inhuman practices already being carried out against the most
vulnerable sections of society.
See Also:
Britain: Terminally ill Ghanaian
woman deported and denied medical care
[18 January 2008]
Britain: Gifted young footballer
fights deportation
[4 January 2008]
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