MPs vote to remove peers amendment stripping out child refugee protections from immigration law
The Government has stripped out protections for lone child refugees from flagship immigration legislation that will end EU freedom-of-movement rules in the UK.
MPs voted 327 votes to 264 – majority 63 – to remove an amendment made by peers which would have required the Government to ensure unaccompanied children in the EU continue to be relocated with close relatives in the UK.
The division list showed six Conservative MPs rebelled to try and keep the measure in the Bill, including former ministers David Davis and Tim Loughton.
The amendment to continue existing arrangements had been successfully moved in the House of Lords by refugee campaigner and Labour peer Lord Dubs (pictured), who fled the Nazis as a child on the Kindertransport.
The Immigration and Social Security Co-ordination (EU Withdrawal) Bill is part of the move towards the Government’s new points-based immigration system, to be introduced from 2021.
MPs also disagreed with Lords amendment three, to give EU children in care and care leavers automatic and indefinite leave to remain, by 330 votes to 262 – majority 68.
Speaking during the debate, Conservative former cabinet minister Karen Bradley said it is “absolutely vital” to have safe and legal passages to the UK post-Brexit.
She said: “If we want to stop the small boats, if we want to stop the migrants being under the wheel arches of vehicles, if we want to deal with this, we need to deal with it by making sure there is a safe and legal passage.
“If I can quote Archbishop Desmond Tutu, who said, ‘There comes a point where we need to stop just pulling people out of the river, we need to go upstream and find out why they’re falling in’.
“If I can urge the minister to work with the Home Office and newly created Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office to make sure upstream we’re dealing in source countries with how we stop people falling into the river, because we can’t deal with that problem just in the Channel.”
Tory former minister Mr Loughton added: “We need a Dubs 2 and we need a family reunion scheme regardless of Brexit.
“We need it, we have a great tradition of saving these children, if we don’t have it in this Bill come January 1 we will have no safe and legal route for very, very vulnerable children.”
Home Office minister Kevin Foster earlier said it “does not make sense” to have separate provisions for child refugees in EU member states compared with those in the rest of the world.
He said: “I understand the important issues this amendment seeks to address and confirm the Government’s commitment to the principle of family unity and to supporting vulnerable children.”
Mr Foster added: “We granted protection and other leave to more than 44,000 children seeking protection since 2010.
“The UK continues to be one of the highest recipients of asylum claims from unaccompanied children across Europe, receiving more claims than any EU member state in 2019 and 20% of all claims made in the EU.
“Yet now we’ve left the EU it does not make sense in the long term to have a different set of provisions for those in fundamentally safe and democratic countries compared to the rest of the world unless based on effective reciprocal agreements relating to returns and family reunification.
“We have made a credible and serious offer to the EU on new arrangements for the family reunion of unaccompanied asylum-seeking children and it remains our goal to negotiate such an arrangement.
“But the UK does provide safe and legal routes for people to join family members in the UK through existing immigration rules, all of which are unaffected by our exit from the EU, such as the provisions under part 11 of the immigration rules.”
MPs also rejected Lords amendments to assess the end of freedom of movement on the social care sector, to give EU citizens granted permission to live in the UK physical evidence of their migration status, and to impose a 28-day limit on immigration detention for European Economic Area and Swiss nationals.
Liberal Democrat former minister Alistair Carmichael said in a statement: “The Windrush Scandal showed the devastating impact of the hostile environment on people who cannot easily prove their rights.
“By denying EU citizens physical proof of settled status, the Government risks making them the victims of a new Windrush-style scandal.”
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