UK

Soaring asylum backlog deemed ‘disastrous record’ for Sunak and Braverman

Prime Minister Rishi Sunak and Home Secretary Suella Braverman have been accused of overseeing ‘complete chaos’ in the asylum system (Phil Noble/PA)
Prime Minister Rishi Sunak and Home Secretary Suella Braverman have been accused of overseeing ‘complete chaos’ in the asylum system (Phil Noble/PA)

The UK’s soaring asylum backlog amounts to a “disastrous record” for the Prime Minister and Home Secretary, Labour has said.

The Opposition accused Rishi Sunak and Suella Braverman of overseeing “complete chaos” as Home Office data showed a record 175,000 people were waiting for an initial decision on an asylum application at the end of June.

The figure is up 44% from a year earlier and the highest since current records began in 2010.

Campaigners blamed Government policy for leaving people “languishing in limbo and unsafe accommodation”, and warned it is “causing immense suffering to refugees who just want to get on with their lives”.

The data, which also shows 80% of people have been waiting longer than six months for an initial decision on their claim, piles further pressure on Mr Sunak, who has made tackling small boat Channel crossings one of his top five priorities.

Stephen Kinnock, Labour’s shadow immigration minister, said: “These new statistics set out in stark terms the complete chaos the Tories have created in the immigration and asylum system.

“With this level of mismanagement, there is very little prospect of reducing the eye-wateringly high bill for hotel rooms for all those left in limbo, currently costing the British taxpayer £6 million a day.”

Bibby Stockholm
Ministers hope to accommodate migrants on the Bibby Stockholm barge despite a series of setbacks (John Gurd/PA)

Ministers are looking to house migrants on former military bases and a barge to reduce the expense of accommodating them in hotels.

Freedom from Torture’s associate director Natasha Tsangarides said: “This is a crisis of the Government’s own making. The huge backlog of asylum claims is the result of over a decade of policy failures, mismanagement, and systemic neglect that has left over 175,000 people – over a third more than last year – languishing in limbo and unsafe accommodation.

“Rather than pushing cruel and draconian measures aimed at punishing refugees, this Government must rebuild a fair and efficient asylum system and urgently expand safe routes to the UK.”

She also noted that Home Office statistics showing that just over seven in 10 of initial decisions in the year to June were grants of refugee status “disprove the Government’s toxic narrative” as they left “no doubt that most people reaching our shores are refugees – men, women, and children fleeing the most unimaginable horrors”.

Refugee Council chief executive Enver Solomon said: “The record high asylum backlog is having a devastating impact on the people we work with, whose lives are put on hold indefinitely while they anxiously wait to hear whether they will be allowed to stay in the UK.”

He also raised concerns over an unprecedented number of asylum claims being withdrawn, saying each claim should be given proper consideration.

“The Home Office certainly shouldn’t rely on asylum claims being withdrawn as a way of showing its backlog figures are going down,” he said.

The Institute for Public Policy Research also called the alarm bells over withdrawals, which made up 47% of all initial asylum decisions.

Marley Morris, associate director for migration, trade and communities, said: “In the long run, this could backfire on the Government, as people whose applications are withdrawn end up being pushed underground or make fresh asylum claims.”

The British Red Cross also said the Government must “urgently review its efforts to reduce the backlog and publish data on why vulnerable people’s claims are being withdrawn”.

It is “deeply concerned” about the “toll” being stuck in the asylum backlog “for months or even years” takes on people’s physical and mental health.

POLITICS Migrants
(PA Graphics)

Rachel Goodall, head of asylum services at Refugee Action, said: “The huge backlog in asylum decision making is a product of the Government’s hostile environment and it is causing immense suffering to refugees who just want to get on with their lives.

“It has forced thousands of people into inappropriate housing such as former hotels, prison ships and MoD (Ministry of Defence) sites from which only the private firms trousering millions in taxpayer-funded profits benefit.”

The charity called for the Government to give asylum seekers leave to remain in the UK if they end up waiting more than a year for a decision on a claim.

Liberal Democrat home affairs spokesman Alistair Carmichael said: “It’s time for the Home Secretary to stop grandstanding and finally get serious.

“That means tackling these failures and creating an immigration system that works for the UK and our economy, while treating everyone with dignity and respect.”

Downing Street and the Home Office have been contacted for comment.