Sir Keir Starmer condemns 'inhuman' asylum ferries idea
- Published
Proposals to process asylum seekers in disused ferries are "inhuman", Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer has said.
He accused the government of "lurching from one ridiculous proposition to the next".
According to Refugee Action, 35,566 asylum applications were made in 2019 down from a peak of 84,000 in 2002.
Top Home Office civil servant Matthew Rycroft said "everything is on the table" when it comes to "improving" the UK's asylum system.
And Downing Street said it was looking at what other countries do "to inform a plan for the UK".
But the Labour leader fiercely criticised the plan, telling reporters: "This isn't creative thinking... these suggestions are inhuman and the government shouldn't be pursuing them.
"Everybody knows that the biggest problem with asylum seekers' claims is that it takes a long time for the Home Office to process them, that's the problem, it's been there for years.
"Get your house in order, get that sorted out instead of lurching from one ridiculous proposition to another."
He called for better international cooperation, adding: "There is of course an issue with people trying to get to the United Kingdom, but people are fleeing often from persecution."
'Brainstorming ideas'
Home Secretary Priti Patel asked officials to look at policies, including housing people who are seeking asylum offshore.
On Tuesday, the Financial Times reported the Foreign Office had carried out an assessment for Ascension Island, a remote UK territory in the Atlantic Ocean - which included the practicalities of transferring migrants thousands of miles - and decided not to proceed.
Now the Times has reported that the government is giving "serious consideration", external to the idea of buying retired ferries and converting them into processing centres, but it says the Home Office rejected a proposal to use decommissioned oil platforms in the North Sea.
The newspaper also says processing migrants on an island off the coast of Scotland had been considered, but First Minister Nicola Sturgeon tweeted, external that "any proposal to treat human beings like cattle in a holding pen will be met with the strongest possible opposition from me".
Appearing before the Public Affairs Committee, Home Office Permanent Secretary Mr Rycroft said he would not comment on leaks to newspapers, but that the department was "brainstorming" ideas.
He said: "No decisions have been taken. No final proposals have been put to ministers."
Mr Rycroft said the UK would "always comply with all of our international obligations" and civil servants would "assess all of the various different possible ideas out there to see which are legal and which make operational sense… so that ministers can ultimately make decisions".
How does the government tempt fewer people to attempt a perilous crossing of the Channel to reach the south coast?
Well, one idea is to make it clear that even a successful crossing won't mean getting to stay in the UK - at least in the short term.
The government is exploring "all sorts of options" - not my words, but those of the most senior civil servant in the Home Office.
Hence the recent headlines about transferring asylum seekers to a lump of British rock in the middle of the South Atlantic - Ascension Island, or buying an old ferry to house them.
But remember, although the numbers coming over the Channel in boats are at a record high, they are still a small proportion of overall asylum seekers coming to the UK.
And rows about asylum are far from new.
Twenty years ago, it was the then-Home Secretary, Jack Straw, found himself in a row with his own party, external about what the Labour government should do about the issue.
So this is an historic problem for parties of both colours.
The SNP's home affairs spokeswoman, Joanna Cherry, said the leaked plans showed "the callousness at the core" of the government, and the plans would "treat vulnerable asylum seekers as cattle rather than human beings".
But Conservative MP for Gravesham in Kent, Adam Holloway, said the Home Office was "completely right" to be looking at other options that were "some sort of deterrent" for asylum seekers.
He told Radio 4's Today programme: "We need to break the link in people's minds that if you get to Britain you're going to stay in Britain, you're going to stay in a hotel and you're going to be accommodated."
He added that the UK needed to find a "civilised version" of the model used by Australia, which has controversially used offshore processing and detention centres for asylum seekers since the 1980s.
The discussion comes as record numbers of people are crossing the Channel to the UK, with 400 arriving in one day in September.
Nearly 7,000 people have reached the UK in more than 500 small boats this year - by 23 September, 1,892 migrants had arrived during the month, more than in all of 2019.
But they are still a small proportion of the asylum seekers coming to the UK.
Eligible for asylum
To be eligible for asylum in the UK, applicants must prove they cannot return to their home country because they fear persecution due to their race, religion, nationality, political opinion, gender identity or sexual orientation.
A caseworker decides if they have a valid claim by taking into account factors such as the country of origin of the asylum seeker or evidence of discrimination.
This is supposed to be done in six months but delays in processing claims have increased significantly in the last year.
While waiting for a decision to be made, asylum seekers are usually not allowed to work and are initially placed in hostel-type accommodation before longer-term housing is arranged.