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Home Office 'work-to-eat' scheme dealt a blow by charity's withdrawal

Posted: 09 June 2005 | Subscribe Online


The YMCA has pulled out of the Home Office's plan to force failed asylum seekers to work in exchange for living support amid fierce condemnation of the scheme.

In an apparent u-turn, YMCA England said it would not be running a pilot project in Liverpool after it transpired that it would be impossible to focus on the "needs and wishes" of the 40 applicants as they had hoped.

The charity, thought to be alone in accepting the Home Office's invitation to bid for pilot scheme funding, insists it was fully aware of the law, before going into consultation with the Home Office. The law stipulates that those who have had their asylum application rejected will have to work up to 35 hours a week to receive food and lodging.
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Richard Capie, YMCA head of external communications, said the charity had "always had concerns" about the compulsory nature of the law but admitted the decision to withdraw from negotiations came following a meeting with local groups who would be involved in implementing the scheme last week.

At the meeting, attended by the police, local councillors and voluntary and charity bodies, the YMCA and the Home Office encountered "unanimous opposition" to the proposals, according to Rashid Iqbal, asylum manager of Refugee Action's Liverpool office.

"YMCA England quite clearly hadn't thought out what the asylum seekers would be expected to do," Iqbal said, adding that they would have been unable to implement the pilot scheme without the support of voluntary groups and charities and faced the prospect of either commissioning the private sector or ending involvement in the scheme.
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The Home Office said that it was still in consultation with the YMCA over setting up pilots in other parts of the UK, although Capie said that the charity would only run a pilot scheme elsewhere if it was done on a voluntary basis.

"The YMCA were quite taken aback at the level of opposition." Iqbal said. "The local authority was vehemently opposed to supporting this scheme. Most of the voluntary organisations there consider this as some form of slave labour. I only hope that the message went back to the Home Office and they do not try and set it up elsewhere."


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