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Asylum and adoption bills face down opposition to become law

Posted: 14 November 2002 | Subscribe Online


Controversial bills on asylum and adoption finally reached the statute book last week, after months of debate.

The Nationality, Immigration and Asylum Bill became law after MPs overturned a vote in the House of Lords against the government's plans to educate asylum seeker children outside of mainstream schools, and house asylum seekers in large-scale accommodation centres in rural areas.

However, in a final concession, home secretary David Blunkett agreed that an independent monitor could assess whether or not the planned asylum seeker accommodation centres were in the right locations.
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A further concession will allow asylum seekers to leave the accommodation centres after six months if their applications have not been processed.

Meanwhile, the first adoption legislation in 26 years was given royal assent after the House of Lords finally gave way on the issue of unmarried and same-sex adoptions.

An amendment to the Adoption and Children Bill allowing unmarried couples, including same-sex couples, to adopt children was passed by a narrow majority in the House of Lords, paving the way for the bill to become law.

Parts of the new act on adoption support and inter-country adoption will be enacted next year, with the remaining elements of the legislation due to come into effect during 2004.

Other measures in the bill include new rights for birth parents to be able to trace their adopted children dating back to 1945.
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Health minister Jacqui Smith said the act would underpin the government's drive to speed up the adoption process and deliver its target for a "40 per cent increase, and if possible a 50 per cent increase"in the number of looked-after children who were adopted.

She added that it would be of "lasting significance to thousands of children and their new families".

Predicting that the act would shape the face of adoption in the future, a spokesperson for Baaf Adoption and Fostering said: "The new act will be a major step forward in the development of an adoption service which puts the needs of children first."


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