Fury as Braverman depicts homelessness as a
‘lifestyle choice’
Senior Conservative says home secretary should not
discuss complex issue in such terms and advised her to use ‘wiser’ language
Mark
Townsend and Michael Savage
Sat 4 Nov
2023 13.27 EDT
Suella
Braverman has been rebuked by a senior Tory campaigner on homelessness after
the home secretary provoked outrage by describing rough sleeping as a
“lifestyle choice.”
Bob
Blackman MP, head of the all-party parliamentary group for ending homelessness,
said Braverman was wrong to discuss a complex and serious issue in such terms
and advised her to use “wiser” language.
Braverman
posted on X, formerly Twitter, that she plans to crack down on the pitching of
tents in urban areas, which she largely blamed on individuals “from abroad”.
The home
secretary wrote: “We cannot allow our streets to be taken over by rows of tents
occupied by people, many of them from abroad, living on the streets as a
lifestyle choice.”
Blackman,
who set up the parliamentary group in 2016, told the Observer: “Homelessness
for people from the UK is not a lifestyle choice, far from it. Every case is
unique. People would have ended relationships or fallen out with parents –
which is why young people end on the streets. They may have made the wrong
choices in life or had an accident and be unable to work. I obviously would
never use [Braverman’s] words. She should use wiser words.”
Of course, the government likes to peddle the idea of
‘intentional homelessness’ – it’s a convenient cop-out
Amnesty
The home
secretary’s intervention will further underline her standing as a divisive
figure. Yesterday, campaigners outside the Home Office called on Braverman to
stop “stirring up hatred and fear”. Weyman Bennett, co-convenor of Stand Up To
Racism, said: “We’re here because there’s a racist running the Home Office.
[Braverman] is a bigot.”
Just days
earlier, Braverman had courted controversy by calling pro-Palestinian
demonstrations “hate marches” and claiming that protesters were planning to
“desecrate Armistice Day” next weekend.
The
Metropolitan police tried to calm tensions by pointing out that pro-Palestinian
demonstrators have no plans to march on Remembrance Sunday, or to march near
the Cenotaph or Whitehall the day before.
Several
groups have spoken out against the home secretary’s attitude this weekend,
especially since sources told the Financial Times that Braverman has pushed for
a new civil offence that would see charities fined for providing tents to
homeless people to be included in the king’s speech this week.
Jen Clark,
economic and social rights lead at Amnesty, said: “Of course, the government
likes to peddle the idea of ‘intentional homelessness’ – it’s a very convenient
cop-out, but in truth the spiralling housing crisis is a result of systematic
government failures.
“We need to
see housing recognised as a basic human right and protected in law so that we
can hold the government to account. This is a useful distraction from any
discussion about how far they are from delivering on their 2019 manifesto
commitment to end rough sleeping.”
Homelessness
charity Shelter said Braverman’s comments were a sign of failed government
policy: “No one should be punished for being homeless. Criminalising people for
sleeping in tents, and making it an offence for charities to help them, is
unacceptable.”
Labour’s
deputy leader, Angela Rayner, said that after 13 years in power the Tories were
“blaming homeless people rather than themselves”.
The Liberal
Democrats said it was “grim” that Braverman was attempting to criminalise
charities for simply “trying to keep people warm and dry”.
Blackman
said those involved in the debate should remember the “everyone in” policy
introduced during the first lockdown in England, which saw about 15,000
homeless people given emergency accommodation in hotels in March and April
2020. The scheme is thought to have saved the lives of hundreds of rough
sleepers.
He said:
“The ‘everyone in’ programme demonstrated that if you have got the political
will to take people off the streets and provide them with somewhere to stay,
you can achieve it.”

Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário