No
evidence new asylum rules will work, top advisor says
February 10,
2025 Robin Pascoe
https://www.dutchnews.nl/2025/02/no-evidence-new-asylum-rules-will-work-top-advisor-says/
The Dutch
government’s most senior advisory body has told immigration minister Marjolein
Faber not to submit two pieces of legislation aimed at reducing the number of
asylum seekers to parliament as they are.
The Council
of State, which advises on all draft laws, said that the proposals “do not
convincingly demonstrate that the measures will actually help limit the influx
or make asylum procedures more efficient.”
There is no
practical or scientific evidence that there will be an impact, the ruling said.
“There are no figures in the notes which show how big the reduction [in
applications] will be and how long this will take.”
On the
contrary, the rulings state, the measures are likely to place additional strain
on both the immigration service and the legal system.
In addition,
the council points out that next year the Netherlands will be required to
implement the European Asylum and Migration Pact. If her plans are not in line
with EU guidelines, there could be further problems in implementing the new
laws and additional legal proceedings, the council said.
Faber said
on Friday that she planned to press ahead with the rules, whatever the council
said, and that she is prepared to change at most “a comma or full stop.” Geert
Wilders, leader of the far-right PVV, has also said he is not prepared to
accept any alterations to Faber’s plans which are supposed to be part of the
“toughest asylum regime ever”.
Their
positions are likely to cause further tensions between the four cabinet
parties. The NSC said earlier that it would not support Faber’s draft laws if
the Council of State is critical and the position of the VVD is also unclear.
Backlogs
The council
points out in its comments that the IND and legal system are already facing
“significant backlogs” in dealing with asylum-related cases. It also says that
both organisations were only given “one week” to provide feedback on Faber’s
proposals.
“While there
may be a political desire to take swift action to tighten national asylum
policy, this is not a sufficient reason to skip steps or allocate inadequate
time for legislative preparation,” the council said. “The drafting of these
proposals has therefore been inadequate.”
The first
piece of legislation scraps permanent residency permits for refugees, reduces
the primary refugee permit from five to three years, stops adult children from
joining their parents in the Netherlands, and makes it easier to declare people
“undesirable aliens.”
It will also
stop refugees bringing in their families until they have lived here for two
years and have a home and income.
Two-tier
system
The second
bill will allow officials to differentiate between people who fled their home
country because of their ethnicity, sexual orientation, or religion, and those
who fled from war or violence, including natural disasters.
A third law
will make it a crime to refuse to cooperate with deportation plans.
The three
laws replace the earlier plan to introduce emergency legislation that would
have allowed ministers to bypass parliament but was opposed by coalition party
NSC.
Neither
Faber or Wilders have yet commented on the official report.
More to
follow

Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário