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Refugee charity calls on government to press ahead with induction centres

Posted: 30 January 2003 | Subscribe Online


Nick Hardwick, the chief executive of the Refugee Council, has urged the government to continue with its controversial plans for asylum seeker induction centres.

Speaking at the Refugee Council's conference on the impact of the Nationality, Immigration and Asylum Act 2002, he said: "The government should press ahead with the induction process and ignore the racist Nimbys [not in my back yard]."

He added that establishing the induction centres was the first step in "restoring order and credibility" in the current system.
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Hardwick's remarks came as the government held its first public meeting in Sittingbourne, Kent, at the end of last week over plans to convert a hotel into an induction centre.

The meeting between Home Office officials and local authorities and residents follows complaints that the department had failed to consult the local community about its proposals for the Coniston Hotel (news, page 7, 23 January).

The hotel may be converted into a centre to accommodate 111 asylum seekers during their first seven to 10 days in the UK.

A Home Office spokesperson said the consultation would last for a week and that the government was still looking to establish up to 10 other induction centres.
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The Conservatives want all asylum seekers to be held in secure units until they undergo security checks.

Meanwhile, the government's policy to deny housing and financial support to those who do not declare their status on their arrival into the country has been challenged in the High Court.

At a brief hearing last week, Justice Maurice Kay gave permission for two asylum seekers to have the policy judicially reviewed at a hearing in March in what could prove to be a vital test case.


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