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Councils demand rethink on placing failed asylum-seeker children in care

Posted: 11 August 2005 | Subscribe Online


A group of councils are demanding that the government reviews the policy under which children of failed asylum seekers can be taken into care, writes Amy Taylor.

Ten councils in the Greater Manchester area plus Blackburn with Darwen cite the distress children suffer in a letter to the Home Office's immigration and nationality directorate.

Under section nine of the Asylum and Immigration (Treatment of Claimants, etc) Act 2004, benefits are withdrawn from failed asylum-seeker parents who refuse to return to their countries of origin, making them unable to support their children financially.
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The policy is being piloted in Greater Manchester and parts of London and Leeds.

The councils' action comes as an asylum-seeker family in Bolton became one of the first to face the possibility of having their children removed.

The Sukula family of six children, four of them under 10, lost their appeal last week against the Home Office's decision to withdraw benefits. They were supposed to leave their council house last Friday but are still living in the property.

Jason Travis, a teacher at the secondary school attended by some of the children, said the family, who fled the Democratic Republic of Congo three and a half years ago, were considering mounting a judicial review.

A Bolton Council spokesperson said it had no plans to evict the family and would help them with basic needs while working through the case. Bolton is one of the signatories to the letter.
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But another family facing destitution under the policy, the Khanali family in Bury, won their appeal.

Nushra Mapstone, professional officer at the British Association of Social Workers, welcomed the councils' letter but said they should have acted earlier.

Ann Baxter, secretary of the Association of Directors of Social Services children and families committee, said it was likely that more councils would now go public with their concerns about the policy.

A Home Office spokesperson said it expected families affected by the policy to "act responsibly" and return to their country of origin with their children.


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