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Socialist
Campaign Group Conference
After New Labour
Resolutions
barred from NEC
Report from May NEC
For
a middle east settlement
Israeli withdrawal is the solution
says Jim Mortimer
The
language of peace and war
Tony Benn, highlights the
contradictions that underlie US policy
US
withdraws from ABM treaty
We need parliamentary debate before any steps on NMD says Alice Mahon
MP
Support
grows for
Livingstone's readmission
Labour leadership under pressure reports our London Correspondent
The
lessons of Potters Bar
Bob Crow, RMT General Secretary looks at the underlying problems of
the railways
Westminster
News
All the latest news from the Socialist Campaign Group of Labour MPs
Eyewitness
from Palestine
Jeremy Corbyn MP reports on the effects of the Israeli bombardment
Lessons
of the local election
Labour's local government
decline continues
Ann Kane summarises the results of the local elections
How
the BNP won and how
they can be defeated
Cllr Mohammed Azam, Coalition Against Racism - Unite to Stop the BNP
analyses the BNP wins in Burnley compared to its defeat in Oldham
A
Labour Mayor for London
Ken Livingstone, Mayor of London urges a united Labour vote in the
London elections
The
ousting of Bustani
sets a dangerous precendent for international bodies says Lynne
Jones MP
Blair's
euro bubble bursts
Opinion is against the Euro
says Kelvin Hopkins MP
Post
Office at turning point
Introduction
of competition will bleed the industry to death says Billy
Hayes, CWU General Secretary
No
public interest in Enterprise Bill
Harry Barnes MP
calls on the government to abandon its attack on the public interest
AEEU:
Time for change
Derek Simpson reports on his
election campaign
Review:
A system for the rich
Barry Gray reviews 'The United States as a HIPC - how the poor
are financing the rich' by Romilly Greenhill and Ann Pettifor
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If
there is one proposal in the Nationality, Immigration and Asylum Bill
which symbolises the Home Office attitude towards asylum seekers it is
that children placed in the proposed accommodation centres will be excluded
from mainstream schools.Of course it is not easy for schools to deal with
significant numbers of children coming and going during the school year,
especially children who may have suffered traumatic experiences. But those
schools, and there are many, which have recognised the stimulus which
highly motivated asylum seeker children can bring, have learnt not just
how to cope, but how to offer the support which such children need.
Exclusion from mainstream education does not sit comfortably with government
proposals, which were welcomed, to encourage the integration of refugees.
The core of the contradiction is the refusal to contemplate anything which
can be seen as moves to integration until after an asylum seeker has been
given refugee status.
The Bill finished its committee stage on 21 May, and will be back in the
Commons in early June. Sitting on the committee was a strange experience,
with both Liberal Democrat and Tory MPs using briefings from refugee organisations
and lawyers to attack Labour Ministers from the left.
The education exclusion is just one consequence of the proposal to build
accommodation centres holding up to 750 asylum seekers. All the sites
so far identified for the proposed pilots are outside urban areas. Some
of the opposition in the areas proposed may well be fuelled by racist
attitudes, but there are very good reasons to oppose the plans. They will
isolate asylum seekers from existing communities where family and friends
might be found. They will be very expensive to run. They will do nothing
to improve the lot of the majority of asylum seekers in the dispersal
system. The vision of the Home Office is clearly that in the future asylum
seekers will pass seamlessly from accommodation centres to removal centres
the new name for detention centres. The number of detention places
will expand significantly.
The Bill has other worrying elements, some of which have hardly been debated
at all. The system of timetabling all legislation has meant that some
very important clauses of the Bill were never reached by the committee.
At its last session, the committee reached Clause 76 of the Bill before
the timetable guillotine fell. A further 17 clauses were not debated at
all. These included proposals to remove the right to challenge decisions
of Immigration Tribunals in the High Court by applying for a judicial
review. Instead it will be possible to apply for a review on paper only,
with no oral hearing, on a point of law.
There are some welcome proposals in the Bill. Steps to deal with trafficking
of women and children for prostitution, which is a growing and lucrative
trade, are a positive move. Opening up the work permit scheme and the
promise to look at more ways for people to come to the UK legitimately
to work are generally welcome. So also are plans to open up routes for
asylum seekers to make applications via the United Nations while in other
countries.
There is, however, too much which is punitive, which continues to regard
all asylum claims as at best dubious. What the Bill does not do, and will
not be done by any legislation, is to tackle the failings in the Home
Office systems. Until decisions are made fairly and efficiently, until
the huge backlogs of cases are cleared, asylum seekers will continue to
be blamed for problems which are not of their making.
The Nationality, Immigration
and Asylum Bill is expected to have its third reading in the House of Commons
on Wednesday 12 June. Campaigners are urging those concerned about the proposals
in the Bill to write to their Members of Parliament before this date urging
them to express opposition and support positive amendments. For further
details call 020 7247 9907.
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