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'Obsession' with statistics masks the truth about seeking asylum

Posted: 12 June 2003 | Subscribe Online


The media is "obsessed" with asylum seeker statistics and has failed to paint an accurate picture as to why people are fleeing to the UK, the Immigration Advisory Service's (IAS) chief executive told the House of Commons home affairs committee last week.

"One of the problems is the obsession with numbers and statistics," said Keith Best, adding that it was rare for asylum seekers to be portrayed as individuals who had suffered persecution. "That's where the media have failed. They have failed to articulate why asylum seekers are fleeing and the general public follow the lead and talk about numbers."
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Best's comments came just a week after Community Care launched its 2003 campaign, Right to Refuge: a Fair Deal for Asylum Seekers and Refugees. A key aim of the campaign is to counterbalance the negative portrayal of asylum seekers in the media and challenge the atmosphere of hysteria and racism.

In written evidence, Best criticised the asylum system, claiming that the management of asylum applications and appeals "remains very poor" and citing problems including "enormous" communication problems between and within the bodies responsible for different aspects of the process.

He also said that, although there was a fast-track process for those asylum seekers whose claims were likely to be unfounded, there was not a fast process for those likely to remain.
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He added: "The calibre of decision-making is poor because insufficient investment is put into it." He cited inadequate training, insufficient time spent on claims, and a lack of contact by the decision-maker with individual claimants.

The IAS has made several recommendations aimed at dealing with the backlog of around 30,000 applications.

The charity proposes more training for caseworkers and specialisation of caseworkers by country both addressing problems highlighted by Community Care's survey of practitioners working with asylum seekers (news analysis, page 18, 29 May). It also proposes the granting of status for claimants trapped in the backlog for more than three years.


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