Tory MP tells Boris to crackdown on the ‘wrong’ migrants during questions about Ukrainians [Video]
Tory MP tells Boris ‘we want Ukrainians… we don’t want people in rubber boats’ as it’s revealed Britain is only granting ONE visa for every TEN refugees applying under Homes for Ukraine scheme
28,300 visa applications under Homes for Ukraine scheme and 2,700 granted Further 31,200 applications under Ukraine Family Scheme with 22,800 grantedMore than 4m refugees have fled Ukraine since Russian invasion on February 24
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A Tory MP told Boris Johnson today that he wants ‘rich Qataris’ not ‘people in rubber boats’ coming to the UK as the Prime Minister took questions on Ukrainian refugees at a committee appearance today.
Bill Wiggin, who recently declared a £2,740 Qatar-funded trip to the Gulf country, demanded visa-free access to the UK for Qatari nationals while slamming the Government for letting the ‘wrong’ people into Britain.
The Prime Minister responded by pointing to the Nationality and Borders Bill currently progressing through Parliament as action his Government is taking against people smugglers.
Bill Wiggin, who recently declared a £2,740 Qatar-funded trip to the Gulf country, demanded visa-free access to the UK for Qatari nationals while slamming the Government for letting the ‘wrong’ people into Britain (file photo)
Mr Wiggin, the MP for North Herefordshire, said: ‘The only people who are turning up, turn up in rubber boats,’ he told Boris Johnson, asking: ‘Why can’t we get the right people through our immigration system’ instead of the wrong ones?’
He added: ‘We have, on at least three occasions, promised the Qataris visa-free access.
‘These are very wealthy people who are unlikely to stay. And yet, despite saying we do it three times, we still haven’t delivered.
‘We want Qataris. We don’t want people in rubber boats.’
In response, Mr Johnson said the current Borders Bill – which will criminalise refugees crossing the Channel – would help stop what he called ‘the cruel trading of people’.
Mr Johnson said the current Borders Bill – which will criminalise refugees crossing the Channel – would help stop what he called ‘the cruel trading of people’.
The former shadow minister made the comments when the Prime Minister appeared at a Commons committee to discuss Ukrainians displaced by the Russian invasion
The former shadow minister made the comments when the Prime Minister appeared at a Commons committee to discuss Ukrainians displaced by the Russian invasion.
Britain has so far granted just 2,700 visas to Ukrainians under the Homes for Ukraine scheme despite having received ten times as many applications, it has emerged.
Official UK figures showed there have been 28,300 visa applications received under the sponsorship scheme, plus a further 31,200 under the Ukraine Family Scheme.
Home Office officials gave the total number of visas issued as 25,500 – including 2,700 under the Homes for Ukraine scheme and 22,800 under the family scheme.
The scheme opened on March 14 to allow individuals, charities and businesses to bring Ukrainians – including those with no family ties to the UK – to safety.
However, Britain retains a visa requirement on security grounds while other European countries have waived checks in response to the humanitarian crisis.
And the United Nations refugee agency said that a total of more than four million refugees have now fled Ukraine since Russia launched its war on February 24.
It comes as senior Government ministers are to hold daily crisis meetings to get the beleaguered schemes for Ukrainian refugees back on track.
Ukrainian refugee Anna Zamostana, from the city of Buchach, volunteers at the Ukrainian Cultural Centre ‘Dnipro’ sorting out humanitarian aid for compatriots in Manchester yesterday
The UK Government set out details of the sponsorship scheme to help Ukrainian refugees
Home Secretary Priti Patel and Communities Secretary Michael Gove will chair the sessions with those running the widely criticised Homes for Ukraine programme.
More than 200,000 kind-hearted British families have volunteered to open their homes to Ukrainians fleeing the war, but many have been left angered and frustrated by swathes of red tape.
Boris Johnson said he wanted a ‘light touch’ visa process for Ukrainian refugees, but one that also allowed for security checks to be carried out.
Questioned by Dame Diana Johnson why the UK Government did not bring in a streamlined emergency humanitarian visa for those applying, the Prime Minister told the Commons Liaison Committee: ‘I think we’re not that far apart then, because what I wanted was a system that was as light touch as possible and would enable people to come here, but would enable us also to do checks.
‘We are outside the Schengen system, we have the advantage of being able to clarify people’s status, (that) they’re bona fide – that’s not a bad thing if you want to have a programme that really works and commands confidence.’
Defending the rate of progress in resettling refugees, the Prime Minister added: ‘These numbers are climbing.
‘There is no cap on the family reunion scheme, that’s already at the thick end of 25,000. That’s a pretty big town.’
Mr Johnson said he did not yet know how many of the 2,700 people who have been given visas for the Homes for Ukraine sponsorship scheme had arrived in the UK.
He also said: ‘We’re going to have a lot of Ukrainians, and it’s going to be a great thing, it’s going to be a great thing. They are fantastic people.’
Ukrainian refugees (from left) Anna Zamostana, Marya Vynnyshenko, Anna Vynnyshenko, 10, and Tanya Vynnyshenko volunteer at the Ukrainian Cultural Centre in Manchester yesterday
Ukrainian refugee children from Buchach volunteer at the centre in Manchester yesterday
And the Prime Minister said the number of Ukrainian refugees wanting to come to the UK will ‘continue to rise for a while to come’.
Mr Johnson told the Commons Liaison Committee that most Ukrainians ‘in an ideal world’ would want to stay in the region or go back to their homes but he said ‘a lot of them increasingly are now wanting to come to other European countries, they’re wanting to come to the UK, and that’s quite right’.
‘The numbers are going up quite steeply,’ he said.
‘Now, I think they’ll continue to rise for a while to come. I think it’s going to be a great thing, this country has a very proud record of welcoming evacuees.’
But he said it was right to be careful and revealed that already some of those wanting to come to the UK were not ‘who they say they are’.
He said: ‘We just been hearing some really good questions about modern slavery, about sexual trafficking, about children, about gangsters who might be trading in evacuees. You’ve got to be careful and don’t forget that the point I made on the first day in the House, is that there will also be people coming from that warzone who may not be entirely who they say they are and we’ve had some cases, sadly, of that already.’
In addition, Mr Johnson told MPs that checks are required on those offering homes to fleeing Ukrainians to ensure the sponsorship scheme is not being abused.
Dame Diana Johnson, the Labour chair of the Home Affairs Committee, told Boris Johnson that some anti-slavery and refugee groups had warned that the Homes for Ukraine sponsorship ‘risked operating as Tinder for sex traffickers’.
Speaking to the Commons Liaison Committee, Mr Johnson replied: ‘I think that is one of the reasons why it is important to have as light touch as possible, but to have DBS checks and checks both ways to make sure we have a programme that is really working.’
Asked whether the National Crime Agency should be investigating possible trafficking behaviour on social media, he replied: ‘Certainly. One of the things I’ve become concerned about in the past couple of weeks is what’s happening to refugees, they are overwhelmingly women and children, in the region.
‘Who is predating upon them? What’s happening to them? Yes, I think we have to be very vigilant about that.
‘And that’s why the Homes for Ukrainians scheme has got to be something we’re very generous (with), we open our arms but we also make sure that that scheme is not itself being abused and not by the Ukrainians, but by people who maybe have bad motives.’
Earlier today, the Prime Minister defended the Government’s ‘overwhelmingly generous’ record on taking refugees as the Liberal Democrats said ‘paperwork is being put ahead of people’.
Liberal Democrat leader Sir Ed Davey said in the Commons that an elderly couple on the Polish-Ukrainian border told him ‘they have been told that it’s just too complicated’ to come to the UK as refugees.
He said: ‘Now the Government’s own figures say the same. Paperwork is being put ahead of people. When wealthy businessmen from over 50 countries can come to the UK visa-free, why does the Prime Minister insist that a traumatised Ukrainian mother and child must first fill out a visa form?’
Boris Johnson said: ‘Everybody I think is pulling together, the number of people who have come forward to offer their homes is incredible.
‘But I really don’t think that he should deprecate what the UK is offering. We have already given 25,000 people, have already got visas, we are processing 1,000 a day, and there is no limit, no upper limit to the number that we can take.
‘And this is a country that has already been the most generous in taking people from Afghanistan, the 15,000 under Operation Pitting, 104,000 applications from the Hong Kong Chinese, this is a country that is overwhelmingly generous to people coming in fear of their lives, yes it is, and so is this Government.’
Mr Johnson also faced calls to ‘cut Home Office red tape’ to help more Ukrainians come into the UK at a quicker rate.
At Prime Minister’s Questions, Conservative MP for North Thanet Sir Roger Gale said: ‘Today’s updated Government figures show that of 28,300 applications submitted under the sponsorship scheme by people displaced in Putin’s war, just 2,700 have been processed.
‘Could he please tell the House how many to date of those people have actually arrived in the United Kingdom and will he give his support to Lord Harrington to cut through the Home Office red tape, simplify the application process and get people into the country?’
Mr Johnson replied: ‘We are processing 1,000 a day and I think that the country can – 25,000 visas have already been issued as I just told the House. Almost 200,000 families’ homes have opened their arms to Ukrainians coming in fear of their lives, and there is no limit on the scheme. I think we can be incredibly proud of what the UK is doing.’
But Liberal Democrat home affairs spokesman Alistair Carmichael, MP for Orkney and Shetland, said today: ‘More than 150,000 families are offering to welcome refugees into their homes, but the Conservatives are offering only red tape and delays.
‘Their response has been appallingly slow and chaotic, leaving thousands of Ukrainians in limbo trying to get a visa. Ministers need to work harder and faster to match the compassion shown by the British public.
‘Ukrainian refugees should be allowed to come to the UK now, without first having to apply for a visa. And the Government should set up a fast, ambitious resettlement scheme, working with refugee agencies to bring Ukrainians directly to the UK.’
The Local Government Association said some Ukrainian refugees have been ‘presenting as homeless’, despite being part of the UK Government resettlement schemes.
Chairman Councillor James Jamieson told MPs on the Levelling Up, Housing and Communities Committee: ‘One of the big issues we’re all worried about is people presenting as homeless.
‘The LGA did a survey last week of councils – we had 190 responses from councils with housing responsibilities, which is around two-thirds of authorities, of which 57 of the 190 said they already had people presenting as homeless.
‘That is 144 cases of homelessness – that’s 57 councils, 144 cases. I will make sure the data is correct and get that sent to you, but I’ll give it to you verbally.
‘Forty-four of which were from the family scheme, 36 of which were from the sponsorship scheme and 64 were from unknown or other.
‘We believe there is an element of people presenting as homeless because they are coming to Ireland and then, with the free movement, able to come to the UK, so that maybe an element of the unknown.’
Meanwhile the new refugees minister Lord Harrington appeared before MPs in the Commons today with an update on progress.
Speaking to the Levelling Up, Housing and Communities Committee, Lord Harrington said: ‘If I’m positive, I can say we’ve got 30,000 completed forms thereabouts. But we have not got everything right. It is not as seamless as it should be.’
He added: ‘We (the Home Office) are not trying to slow things up. The last time we looked, there were more than 300 staff and if we include both schemes, about 500 staff. We’ve started evening working, we’ve started weekend working. This is like an emergency operation.
Two Ukrainian children walk out of the customs office at Przemysl Glowny train station in Poland yesterday after disembarking a train from Ukraine to flee the Russian invasion
A Ukrainian family disembarks a train at Przemysl Glowny train station in Poland yesterday
‘It is not that, ‘Oh they will just have to wait’ – it is people there who are desperate to come over, they’ve got through the system and we’ve got to get them here as quickly as possible.’
Asked how many people had arrived as part of the Homes for Ukraine scheme, the former Watford MP said it was ‘too early to publish that data’ but vowed to write to the committee by early next week with the figures.
He said he hoped civil servants would be able to process 15,000 applications per week via both schemes within the next three weeks.
Lord Harrington – who was previously involved in the Syrian resettlement scheme – said there was a need for security checks to ensure Ukrainians applying ‘are who they say they are’, but that questions such as ‘are you a war criminal?’ had been removed from the standard form that had been used.
‘There has been some talk, quite correctly in my view, that the visa application process, the actual filling it out, is too slow,’ Lord Harrington added.
‘I agree with that. I sat down on Saturday morning and spent just under an hour filling one out myself, and I was sitting comfortably with a cup of tea rather than being a refugee, not in the Ukraine but in Poland or wherever. We are going through every step of trying to shorten that form.’
Emma Haddad, director general for asylum and protection at the Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities (DLUHC), said the length of the form for the sponsorship scheme had been cut by a third since applications for refugees first opened after the conflict with Russia started.
Earlier in the session, MPs heard how some Ukrainian refugees have been ‘presenting as homeless’, despite being part of the UK Government resettlement schemes.
Councillor James Jamieson, chairman of the Local Government Association (LGA), said it was an issue councils were ‘all worried about’.
He told the committee that 144 Ukrainian arrivals had declared themselves homeless to 57 councils.
‘Forty-four of which were from the family scheme, 36 of which were from the sponsorship scheme and 64 were from unknown or other,’ Mr Jamieson added.
‘We believe there is an element of people presenting as homeless because they are coming to Ireland and then, with the free movement, able to come to the UK, so that (is) maybe an element of the unknown.’
DLUHC officials said they would be working with councils to understand the ‘scale’ of the problem and that local authorities would be able to fund accommodation out of their individual refugee grants.
A Government source said that 300 officials were now working on processing the deluge of applications – including night shifts and weekend working.
Shadow home secretary, Yvette Cooper, and shadow levelling up secretary, Lisa Nandy, decried in a letter to Ms Patel and Mr Gove what they called a ‘shameful scale of bureaucracy’, which they claimed is ‘preventing desperately vulnerable people from reaching sanctuary in the UK’.
They called for clarity on the length of time taken for visas to be issued and how long security checks are taking.
The Labour MPs wrote: ‘The result of unnecessary Home Office bureaucracy is that desperate Ukrainian families are being let down.
‘While the response of the British public has been overwhelming, with more than 150,000 families signed up to open their homes, the system you have created is squandering that generosity and failing to deliver the support that our country rightly wants to provide.
‘The Government has known for months about the potential invasion of Ukraine by Russia.
‘It is therefore unacceptable that, more than a month on from the start of the conflict, there has been so little progress and there are so many people waiting in limbo before they can reach some security and support.’
Sonya Sceats, chief executive of the Freedom from Torture charity, described the sponsorship scheme numbers as ‘woeful’, and called on the Government to ‘cut the red tape’.
‘In a month where people across the country signed up to welcome more refugees than the Government has in 10 years, these woeful numbers prove why visa-based schemes are an unsuitable gateway for refugees fleeing Ukraine to reach safety here in the UK,’ she said.
‘Increasing reports of horrendous sexual violence against Ukrainian women and girls make it all the more urgent for the Government to cut the red tape so that survivors can get here quickly and access services from specialist trauma services like Freedom from Torture.’
Meanwhile, an extra 200 high-security ‘Firecrest’ computer terminals – needed to process the sensitive details – have also been deployed.
The process of approving applications has also been ‘redesigned’ to make it quicker, Whitehall sources said.
‘The Home Office is working flat out to streamline processes while maintaining vital security checks to make it easier for Ukrainians to come to the UK,’ the source said.
‘The number of visas being granted under Homes for Ukraine should start to ramp up at the end of this week.’
And the source insisted that the Government has still set up ‘one of the fastest and biggest visa programmes in British history.’
Earlier this week the Daily Mail reported widespread frustration and ‘growing panic’ in Whitehall at the slow pace of the Homes for Ukraine programme.
Now most of that irritation is being directed at Miss Patel’s department, which processes refugees’ visas and oversees the vetting of applicants.
One source said ministers were clear they ‘have to start delivering on this’, or risked alienating thousands of British voters who are desperate to help.
Lord Harrington told MPs two weeks ago that he expected ‘thousands’ of evacuees would have arrived through the Homes for Ukraine scheme by now.
The number to have actually made it here has not yet been released by the Government, but is thought to be in the hundreds.
The Home Secretary has repeatedly stressed the importance of maintaining a rigorous visa application system for national security reasons.
Although the vast majority of people fleeing Ukraine are women and children, Miss Patel has said that it would be ‘naive and misguided’ to think Russian agents could not be among them.
A full Government-backed system to match hosts with evacuees is due to be announced soon.
But until then, volunteers can pair up informally with Ukrainians and include those details in the Homes for Ukraine online application form.
Hosts have been offered a £350-a-month, tax-free ‘thank you’ from the Government in exchange for taking in refugees for a minimum of six months.
The UK’s other visa programme, the Ukraine Family Scheme, allowing families to be reunited in Britain, saw a slow start but has now handed out more than 22,000 visas to evacuees.