Undocumented migrant children and young people are among the
most vulnerable in the UK and the most at risk of exceptional poverty and
destitution. University of Oxford research has estimated that there are 120,000
undocumented migrant children in the UK, 65,000 of whom were born in this
country.
These children, who live in the UK without regular
immigration status, are often unable to progress in education and access basic
social rights including healthcare and support as a result of their immigration
status, leaving them extremely vulnerable and in many cases facing extreme
poverty. At the same time, they are often unable to take the necessary steps to
regularise their status, even when they have very strong claims for remaining
in the UK. This may be due to lack of awareness of their legal options in an
ever more complex immigration system, inadequate or unavailable legal advice,
or prohibitive Home Office application fees. In some cases, they may be at risk
if they were to return to their country of nationality. As a result,
"unreturnable" children and young people who are long-term, settled
residents of their communities are left in limbo.
Public concern about immigration has fuelled a policy
approach based on the notion that creating a "hostile environment"
for migrants is an effective means of encouraging them to leave, in the belief
that it is Britain's "generosity" to migrants that attracts them to
the UK. The past few years have already seen the refusal to increase asylum
support levels in line with inflation, the removal of legal aid for almost all
immigration cases, the tightening of immigration rules on long residence,
restrictions on access to private housing and proposals to severely restrict
access to healthcare.
In 2008, MP Ian Duncan Smith, in opposition, noted that the
then government was "using forced destitution as a means of encouraging
people to leave voluntarily" and that this "failed policy" was
"driven by the thesis, clearly falsified, that we can encourage people to
leave by being nasty". In 2012, the Education Select Committee asserted
that "it would be outrageous if destitution were to be used as a weapon
against children because of their immigration status". Yet, as we approach
2015, this is still the risk.
Coram Children's Legal Centre's research and experience,
documented in a 2013 report: "Growing up in a hostile environment: the
rights of undocumented children in the UK", shows that such a policy
approach is having a significant and damaging impact on children in the UK,
pushing many into poverty. And as well as the consequences for children, many
of the changes implemented as part of this "hostile environment"
agenda have resulted in a shifting of responsibility and costs onto already
stretched local authorities, who for many people are the last remaining safety
net when destitute and desperate. For example, homeless families with children
have to turn to their local authority if they are homeless, placing increasing
pressure on local government resources.
The Christmas story is about a couple in search of documentation, and the child born of them, homeless in a manger, in a stable.
No comments:
Post a Comment