Asylum system ‘riddled with abuse’ and needs
fundamental change – Jenrick
The Immigration Minister said people arriving in small
boats ‘risk cannibalising the compassion’ of the UK public.
Catherine
Wylie
Sunday 04
June 2023 13:07
The
immigration minister has claimed the UK’s asylum system is “riddled with abuse”
and revealed that migrants will be asked to share hotel rooms as the Government
comes under pressure to reduce net migrations.
Robert
Jenrick said a lot of progress has been made on illegal migration in a short
period of time, with “really unique landmark deals” with France seeing a “big
increase” in the number of interceptions on the beaches.
But he said
the asylum system – which according to him has a backlog of more than 150,000
cases – must be changed “fundamentally”.
Meanwhile,
the BBC reported that the Home Office estimates it will have to spend between
£3 billion and £6 billion on detention facilities, accommodation costs and
removals under the current plans to tackle small boat crossings.
Mr Jenrick
told the BBC’s Sunday With Laura Kuenssberg programme: “The asylum system is
riddled with abuse, we have to be honest with ourselves.
Mr Jenrick
said the Illegal Migration Bill to detain migrants who arrive through
unauthorised means before returning them home or to a third country, such as
Rwanda, will alleviate the pressure.
“That will
create the deterrent we desperately need, it will break the business model of
the people smuggle gangs and it will stop the system from coming under
intolerable pressure like it is today,” he said.
Mr Jenrick
said he does not think it is unreasonable to ask asylum seekers to share rooms
after a group this week apparently refused to enter a hotel in Pimlico, central
London, where the Home Office had asked them to sleep “four people per room”.
In a letter
to the Home Secretary, the leader of Westminster City Council expressed his
“deep concern” that around 40 refugees were placed in the borough on Wednesday
night “without appropriate accommodation or support available” and no prior
communication with the local authority.
Speaking
about the incident, Mr Jenrick told the BBC: “As I understand what happened
here was that these migrants, who had themselves said that they were destitute,
they had nowhere to stay, we had offered them a safe bed with board and
lodgings in a good-quality hotel in central London.
“Yes, some
of them had to share with other people. These are single adult males: I don’t
think that’s unreasonable.
“We want to
reduce the cost to the taxpayer. Some people said that wasn’t good enough and
they wanted their own ensuite bedrooms, and the Home Office took the perfectly
reasonable view that we’ve got to look after the taxpayer here.
“And if
you’re genuinely destitute, of course you’d accept that, and common sense
prevailed and, I think, almost all of the migrants in question accepted the
accommodation.”
He denied
it is Government policy to tell asylum seekers they have to share four to a
room in hotels, but said it is “completely fair and reasonable” to ask single
adult males to share a room.
“We don’t
want to be using hotels at all. These are taking away valuable assets for the
local business community, for society, you know, people’s weddings and personal
events have had to be cancelled because of that.
“But where
we are using them, it’s right that we get good value for money for the
taxpayer.
“And so if
single adult males can share a room, and it’s legal to do so, which will
obviously depend on the size of the accommodation, then we’ll ask people to do
that.
“I think
that’s a completely fair and reasonable approach,” he told Kuenssberg.
Mr Jenrick
said people arriving in small boats “risk cannibalising the compassion” of the
UK public.
He also
told Sophy Ridge On Sunday on Sky News that young men putting “overwhelming
pressure” on the asylum system are making it harder for the country to support
people who “genuinely need our help”.
Mr Jenrick
told the programme that thousands of Albanians are returning to their home
country.
He added:
“There are hundreds of Albanians who’ve arrived on small boats who have been
placed on those flights as a result of the processes we put in place and the
agreements that we’ve reached with Albania.
“The reason
that we are returning Albanians is to deter people from coming in the first
place, and that is succeeding.”
He also
said that migration targets are not “particularly helpful”, despite previous
Tory promises.
Mr Jenrick
told the BBC: “Net migration is far too high today.”
But asked
about David Cameron’s 2010 pledge to reduce annual net migration below 100,000,
Mr Jenrick said: “I don’t think that targets like that are particularly helpful
because migration is an extremely challenging space where behaviours are
constantly changing.”
Net migration
to the UK is estimated to have reached a record 606,000 in 2022, up 24% from
488,000 in 2021, according to the Office for National Statistics.
Responding
to Mr Jenrick’s comments, Enver Solomon, chief executive of the Refugee
Council, said: “In the media today the Immigration Minister falsely claimed
that most people arriving by boat are economic migrants and that the asylum
system is ‘riddled with abuse’, when the truth is that the Government’s own
statistics show this to be untrue, as the majority of people crossing the
Channel to the UK are eventually shown to be refugees.
“Instead of
explaining away failures in the asylum system, it is essential for the
Government to keep a sustained focus on fixing the problems within the UK
asylum system, starting with real commitment and resourcing to tackling the
asylum backlog of 170,000.”

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