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Impossible to justify

Posted: 04 March 2004 | Subscribe Online


Does David Blunkett ever have a moment of self-doubt? Does he ever wake up at 4am wondering whether the draconian measures proposed in his asylum bill are either necessary or justified?

If he does he certainly gives no hint of it, although his sidekick, Beverley Hughes, is starting to sound uncomfortable as she struggles to defend the indefensible.

This government's plans to remove benefits from rejected asylum-seeking families and introduce unprecedented restrictions to their right of appeal are opposed by a broad consensus. This includes everyone from social workers and children's charities to rebel Labour backbenchers and Conservatives (although it is a bit rich for the Tories to try to claim the moral high ground after their suggestion to send asylum seekers to "an island far far away".)
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Despite the growing outcry, the legislation trundles on and this week cleared the latest hurdle on its way to the statute book. Hughes claims her aim is to spare children from "immigration officers coming in the middle of the night" to take them away. But she is happy enough to let social workers do her dirty work for her, removing children from families deliberately made destitute by the Home Office.

Can it really be a Labour government driving this through? It seems scarcely credible that it will carry out its threat to have children taken forcibly into care. Surely the whole thing is going to backfire and instead of forcing families on to the next plane back to their country of origin it will merely send them underground and mean asylum-seeking children will drop out of sight and become more vulnerable than ever.
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How ironic that this distasteful piece of legislation is debated in the Commons in the same week as the government is due to publish its new Children's Bill following on from the Every Child Matters green paper. Clearly at least one group of children in our society matters less than all the others. It is to be hoped that the House of Lords sends the asylum bill back to the Commons and demands some significant concessions.


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