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GOVERNMENT
CLAIMS VICTORY AS ASYLUM NUMBERS DROP
(24 February 2004)
Applications
for asylum fell dramatically in 2003 as a result of tough new measures
including legislation and border controls in France, the Home Secretary
claimed today. The
number of asylum seekers has fallen by 41 per cent year on year
from 84,130 (103,080 including dependants) in 2002 to 49,370 in
2003 (61,050 including dependants). The Government has already met
its commitment to halve the number of applications per month from
a peak in October 2002 before the Nationality, Immigration and Asylum
Act came into force.
In
2003 as a whole, following a surge in applications before tougher
benefits rules came into force, applications fell by 41 per cent
- four times as much as the average across the rest of the EU. As
a result of the significant fall in numbers, applications for state
support had fallen by 60 per cent in the last three months of 2003
compared with the same period in 2002.
The
Home Secretary said that a series of steps was being taken to maintain
the momentum and build on the record 23 per cent increase in the
number of removals in 2003:
- a
new 330 capacity removal centre near Heathrow will open in August;
-
the UK is the first country to reach agreement with the Coalition
Provisional Authority in Iraq to begin returning failed asylum
seekers from April, including both voluntary and enforced returns;
-
we are working closely with the Chinese government to increase
urgently the number of returns we are able to effect to China;
-
the Government is also considering whether to extend the use of
biometrics in visas or on entry to the UK to countries that refuse
to co-operate on returns;
-
action to tackle fraudulent claims from Somalia, including agreement
to begin to return people to Somaliland and arrangements for identifying
Somalis with permission to live elsewhere in the EU (laid in Parliament
yesterday); and
-
the UK expects to sign an agreement soon with the Belgian authorities
to extend the use of UK immigration controls to the Brussels Eurostar
Service, to prevent illegal entry to the UK in the first place.
The
Immigration and Nationality Department (IND) is also reviewing its
enforcement activities as part of an ongoing process of improvement
in order to develop the coverage and focus of its enforcement effort,
assess priorities and how increased resources have been deployed,
and how the Immigration Service can work most effectively with other
agencies.
Mr
Blunkett said: "These figures show the very significant progress
that has been made in dramatically reducing the number of asylum
seekers entering the UK last year as a result of the tough reforms
we have put in place. Following a surge in applications before new
benefits rules came into force in January 2003, the monthly rate
has been halved. This trend was continued in the last three months
of the year with a drop of 52 per cent compared with the end of
2002. For the year as a whole, the numbers are down by 41 per cent.
"The
backlog is the lowest for a decade, claims are falling four times
as fast as elsewhere in Europe and around 80 per cent of decisions
on new cases are made within two months. The number of failed asylum
seekers removed has also increased by 23 per cent. This has not
been easy.
"When
the majority of asylum seekers destroy their documentation, removing
them presents us with a major challenge - we cannot adopt a fantasy
policy of parachuting people out of planes.
"Instead,
we are systematically working to overcome the barriers. We are the
first country in Europe to negotiate a returns agreement with Iraq,
India and Sri Lanka and we have reached agreement to enable the
return of a small number of people to Somaliland. Sometimes the
numbers returned are low to begin with, but our evidence shows that
even a small number of returns deters others from travelling to
the UK.
"The
highest number of applications in 2003 were from Somalia. This is
a country that has suffered a good deal and we know that there are
some Somali refugees seeking sanctuary here for good reason. But
there is also evidence that some Somalis with permission to live
in other EU countries are then also claiming asylum in the UK. This
is unacceptable.
"In
addition to the agreement on returns to Somaliland, the Immigration
Service will be targeting people of Somali origin at ports in order
to establish the full extent of this problem and prevent further
asylum abuse. We are will also be checking the fingerprints of all
asylum applicants from Iraq, Iran, Sudan, Somalia and Turkey against
other EU countries' own fingerprint databases in addition to our
shared database, Eurodac.
"The
progress we are making will soon begin to bring down the costs of
asylum support - the last three months of 2003 show applications
for support down 60 per cent compared with this time last year.
However, a small increase in capital costs this year has been necessary
to increase detention capacity for the new removal centre at Heathrow
and to enhance border controls."
The
Spring Supplementary Estimate, published today, includes the IND
budget for 2003/04 of £2 billion in total. This includes an
increase in capital spending costs for measures including new immigration
controls in France and a new removal centre near Heathrow.
The
key findings from Asylum Statistics 2003 are:
-
applications fell by nine per cent in the last three months of
2003 compared with the previous quarter (from 11,955 to 10,830),
and by 52 per cent compared with the last quarter of 2002;
-
the number of asylum seekers has fallen by 41 per cent year on
year from 84,130 (103,080 including dependants) in 2002 to 49,370
in 2003 (61,050 including dependants);
-
applications to the UK fell four times as much as the average
of 11 per cent in the rest of the EU;
-
the number of cases awaiting an initial decision fell throughout
2003 to 24,500 by December - the lowest for a decade;
-
in 2003, six per cent of decisions granted asylum, 11 per cent
granted some other form of leave to remain and eighty three per
cent of claims were refused. Of those who appealed, 20 per cent
were granted some form of leave at the first stage of appeal;
-
removals of failed asylum seekers increased in 2003 by 23 per
cent to record levels of 12,490 (17,040 including dependants)
from 13,910 including dependants in 2002; and
-
by the end of 2003 the number of asylum seekers receiving NASS
support had fallen by 13 per cent to 80,120, and in the last three
months of 2003 the number of new applications for support was
60 per cent less than at the same time last year.
The
additional measures being taken are:
Colnbrook
removal centre to open in August 2004
The
new removal centre near Heathrow, together with the refurbished
Harmondsworth, will expand the amount of detention space available
to more than 2,700 places by the end of the year. The Home Office
is also looking to expand space at Campsfield House. Colnbrook will
accommodate about 330 single males.
Enforced
returns to Iraq to begin in Spring
The
UK will be the first European country to begin enforced returns
of failed Iraqi asylum seekers in the Spring. The pilot will allow
30 per month to be returned initially. The returns programme will
be linked to a package of assistance with accommodation and employment,
and will operate alongside a voluntary returns programme. The UK
is also providing significant support in Iraq to develop the Iraqi
immigration infrastructure.
New
pressure on China to improve the process for returns
A recent
secondment of Chinese officials to the Immigration Service has resulted
in more than 60 documents being issued for the return of Chinese
nationals and the Government is grateful for the cooperation of
the Chinese government in assisting with this exercise.
However,
the Government is now looking urgently at ways of increasing substantially
the numbers we are able to return to China - particularly those
who refuse to co-operate with the redocumentation process. The Home
Secretary raised this with some of his European counterparts at
a meeting with interior ministers of the major EU countries last
week. The Prime Minister will also discuss this with the Chinese
premier during his forthcoming visit to the UK.
Additional
measures to tackle fraudulent asylum claims
Additional
fingerprint checks will be conducted against the records of other
countries for asylum seekers from the top five countries identified
as having already lodged asylum claims or holding other status elsewhere.
The Immigration Service will also target people of Somali origin
at ports for a trial period to establish a better evidence base
about routes and methods of entry to the UK. A new returns agreement
to Somaliland will enable initially small numbers of Somalis to
begin to be returned.
The
Home Office is also looking at how new technology might help to
further increase the effectiveness of immigration controls.
The
Asylum & Immigration (Treatment of Claimants, etc) Bill, currently
before Parliament, includes measures to overcome some of the barriers
to removals, including:
-
penalties of up to two years for those who destroy their documents
or will not co-operate with the authorities to get new travel
documents when their claims fail;
-
simplifying the appeals process to stop people lodging multiple,
groundless appeals solely to frustrate removal; and
-
encouraging voluntary removal by ending benefits for families
whose claims have failed and who persistently refuse to take up
the offer of a paid, flight home.
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