Braverman’s claim over lowering of threshold for
asylum seekers debunked by lawyers
Immigration experts say home secretary’s speech
criticising global treaties related to refugees against guidance from her own
department
Rajeev Syal
Home affairs editor
Fri 29 Sep
2023 05.00 BST
Suella
Braverman’s claim that increasing numbers of asylum seekers find refuge in the
west because the threshold to qualify for asylum has been lowered does not
apply in the UK under guidance in her own department, lawyers have said.
In a
controversial speech on Tuesday, the home secretary said that as case law has
developed since the Refugee Convention 1951, “what we have seen in practice, is
an interpretive shift away from ‘persecution’, in favour of something more akin
to a definition of ‘discrimination’.”
She said
that “the practical consequence” of this development has been “to expand the
number of those who may qualify for asylum” including gay people and women
fearing discrimination.
But
immigration lawyers have pointed out that Home Office guidance to caseworkers
says that asylum seekers must demonstrate “whether the claimant does in fact
fear persecution”.
A document
entitled ‘Assessing credibility and refugee status,’ which advises caseworkers
since the Nationality and Borders Act came in last year, says “the
decision-maker must determine if it is more likely than not that the claimant
has a characteristic which would cause them to fear persecution for one or more
of the convention reasons [race, religion, nationality, membership of a
particular social group, or political opinion], and that they do in fact fear
persecution”.
Home Office
sources said that Braverman’s speech was addressing global issues and not just
the UK. But the disclosure of the guidance has prompted criticism from a
leading refugee charity.
Enver
Solomon, the chief executive of the Refugee Council, said : “It is alarming
that speculative claims can be made by the home secretary – appearing to
question the standard of her department’s asylum decision-making – without any
serious evidence to support them.
“Suggesting
that decision-making thresholds have been weakened is not credible. It should
not be forgotten that it was only last year that new guidance was issued
following the passing of the Nationality and Borders Act that actually changed
the threshold to a more stringent test,” he said.
In the
speech to a rightwing thinktank in Washington, which has been widely seen as an
attempt to increase her political profile, Braverman said there had been a move
away from “persecution” to “discrimination”.
She added:
“And there has been a similar shift away from a ‘well-founded fear’ toward a
‘credible’ or ‘plausible fear’.
“The
practical consequence of which has been to expand the number of those who may
qualify for asylum, and to lower the threshold for doing so,” she said.
In a
particularly incendiary passage, she said fearing discrimination on the basis
of being gay or a woman should not, by itself, be enough to qualify for refugee
status.
“Let me be
clear, there are vast swathes of the world where it is extremely difficult to
be gay, or to be a woman.
“But we
will not be able to sustain an asylum system if in effect, simply being gay, or
a woman, and fearful of discrimination in your country of origin, is sufficient
to qualify for protection,” she said.
Sir Elton
John and his long-term partner, David Furnish, released a statement saying they
were “very concerned” by her comments and called for “more compassion, support
and acceptance for those seeking a safer future”. Braverman risked “further
legitimising hate and violence”, they warned.
A Home
Office spokesperson said: “Tackling illegal migration is a top priority for the
government, and there are an unacceptable number of people risking their lives,
making dangerous crossings on small boats.
“Through
the recent Illegal Migration Act and last year’s Nationality and Borders Act,
the government has raised the threshold to qualify for refugee status in the
UK, as part of our commitment to stop the boats.”
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