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Clarke hints at future work option

Posted: 05 May 2005 | Subscribe Online


Skilled asylum seekers whose claims have failed who are unable to go home could be allowed to work while they wait to be returned, home secretary Charles Clarke said last week.

Speaking in a BBC2 Newsnight debate Clarke indicated that if Labour was re-elected it may change its policy.

"There might be a case for some of the people who are failed asylum seekers but can't be returned to their country for a variety of reasons whether work could operate in some of these cases," he said.
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Reasons failed asylum seekers cannot return home include the lack of a safe route to countries such as Iraq.

Meanwhile, the charity YMCA England is to run a government pilot programme making failed asylum seekers carry out community activities in order to qualify for accommodation.

Currently, asylum seekers whose claims have failed who are unable to go home are provided with board and lodgings, under section 4 of the Immigration and Asylum Act 1999.
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But measures, contained in the Asylum and Immigration (Treatment of Claimants, etc) Act 2004, have changed this to make the support conditional on their participation in community activities.

The first phase of the scheme will cost about £60,000 for one year and it is likely to be run in Manchester, London, Birmingham, Sheffield or Liverpool. These are all areas with high numbers of failed asylum seekers relying on board and lodgings.


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