9m ago
10.26 BST
Rishi Sunak, asked if asylum seekers will be housed on
the Bibby Stockholm barge next week, told LBC’s Nick Ferrari:
The Bibby Stockholm will be in operation as soon as
it’s passed all the checks and regulations – as soon as possible – that’s the
key thing.
The prime
minister highlighted the Illegal Migration Act before adding:
We’re
making a difference, I’m going to keep going on this ... I’m going to throw
everything at it.
Sunak said
there is “an array of people that want me to fail”, which he said includes
Labour, criminal gangs and “dodgy lawyers”, who he said are a “subset, a
minority, of lawyers”.
He went on:
There are
lots of people who are lined up to try and stop me, but I’m going to keep going
until we stop the boats.
18m ago
10.16 BST
Housing
asylum-seekers on the Bibby Stockholm “floating prison” would be “inhumane” and
risks “retraumatising” people who have escaped war zones and other “horrors”,
the leader of a refugee charity has warned.
Steve
Smith, the CEO of Care4Calais, also expressed his fear that the barge being
prepared to accommodate more than 500 refugees at Portland, Dorset, is an
“accident waiting to happen” because of insufficient fire safety on board with
the Government putting money as a “higher priority than people’s lives”.
Smith said
that the charity is currently assisting 11 people who have received letters
from the Home Office advising them that they will be moved to the vessel.
The letter
states:
You are not
being detained under immigration powers, and this is not detention
accommodation. You are free to leave the site, but we would request that you
sign in and out of the site when you leave and return, so we can assure your
safety.
It adds
that facilities on board will include an on-site nurse, recreational space, voluntary
sector activities, English classes, entertainment areas, worship room, private
space for consultations and to make phone calls and wifi access.
The
government has said there is “no timeframe” for the arrival of the first
refugees to the Bibby Stockholm while final safety checks are being carried
out.
Smith told
the PA news agency:
The obvious
fire hazard of moving a large number of people across to the Bibby is clearly
causing a delay.
We know the
Bibby barge was intended for 220 people, we know the intent is to put 506
residents aboard but, by the time you add security staff and other staff, that
would come to 546.
Now you
have a barge with narrow corridors with three decks, with terms of crowding
people in into what were originally single person rooms with two and in some of
the larger rooms up to six, doubling those on board
“If you’re
on the far side of this barge and on the upper storey and there are only two
fire escapes and that’s where you are when a fire breaks out, you can imagine
the absolute chaos and pandemonium as panicked individuals crammed in narrow
corridors try to get out.
They are
not able to escape on the water side and if they do, what if they can’t swim,
jumping into the water without lifejackets.
This is an
absolute accident waiting to happen, it looks like the government is prepared
to save money, making it a higher priority than people’s lives.
Among those
being supported by the charity are the survivors of torture, people with
disabilities and people who have experienced trauma at sea.
He said:
Housing any
human on a ‘floating prison’ like the Bibby Stockholm is unacceptable. Doing so
to people like this is completely inhumane.
Our concern
in many cases, probably most cases, is that these will be individuals who have
crossed the Channel in flimsy boats and they don’t do this for fun.
They will
have probably had a fairly terrifying journey from the place of origin which
could be something like Afghanistan where, having survived the war, perhaps
having fought on the side of British troops there.
Individuals
like that who have been through all these horrors have been through unwelcoming
and sometimes hostile countries like the Balkans and Libya to get to Calais,
sleeping rough, braving the Channel under really difficult circumstances and
then to be put further on a boat, this has all the potential for
re-traumatising.
Smith said
that speeding up the asylum process by prioritising those from high-risk
countries such as Afghanistan and providing a safe passage system similar to
that put into place for Ukraine would reduce the need for centres like the
Bibby Stockholm.
He said:
What can we
do? Speed up asylum claims process, clear the backlog, provide safe passage,
allow people to start working and integrate better into the community and then
concerns about it costing us £6 million a day start to dissipate.
Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário