Threads / Asylum Accommodation Policy / We are not convinced the Home Office has put in place suffi…
Committee Material Published 29 May 2024 ↗ View on Parliament

We are not convinced the Home Office has put in place sufficient measures to safeguard those pending relocation while they wait to hear what will happen 6 Asylum Accommodation and UK-Rwanda partnership to them. The Home Office is not processing asylum claims for more than 50,000 people who have arrived in the UK via small boats and other irregular means and are deemed ‘inadmissible’ to the asylum system. Currently, the only viable option for many of them is to remove them to Rwanda, as other ...

We are not convinced the Home Office has put in place sufficient measures to safeguard those pending relocation while they wait to hear what will happen 6 Asylum Accommodation and UK-Rwanda partnership to them. The Home Office is not processing asylum claims for more than 50,000 people who have arrived in the UK via small boats and other irregular means and are deemed ‘inadmissible’ to the asylum system. Currently, the only viable option for many of them is to remove them to Rwanda, as other potential third-country partnerships would need significant lead times to be up and running. Meanwhile, these people remain in limbo – some people have n Type: conclusion | Number: 3 | Response status: accepted Government response: The government agrees with the Committee’s recommendation. quarterly. Asylum, Accommodation Support Contracts (AASC) provide a mechanism for application of service credits if provider performance does not meet the thresholds within the AASC contract. Accommodation stan