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LASSN Volunteer Training

LASSN Volunteer Training. WELCOME. Introductions. Name What are volunteering for Why did you get involved One obscure/interesting fact about yourself. English at Home Case studies Scenarios 1 to 1 teaching Teaching materials. Agenda. Morning Introductions The Asylum journey

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LASSN Volunteer Training

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  1. LASSN Volunteer Training WELCOME

  2. Introductions • Name • What are volunteering for • Why did you get involved • One obscure/interesting fact about yourself

  3. English at Home Case studies Scenarios 1 to 1 teaching Teaching materials Agenda Morning • Introductions • The Asylum journey • Questions Afternoon • English at Home Afternoon • Case studies • Scenarios • Evaluation Finish around 3.30 Grace Hosting

  4. Housekeeping and ground rules

  5. What do people believe? … we are being flooded … everyone comes for the benefits … everyone is bogus … asylum seekers are terrorist & criminals … the UK is the number one destination for asylum seekers

  6. What do we believe? • People are mis-informed • Informed people are sympathetic • Informed people are supportive • Informed people are generous

  7. Where do refugees come from? 2012

  8. How many people do you think claim asylum in the UK each year? • Around 5,000 6% • Around 25,000 23% Actual • Around 100,000 31% • Around 200,000 23% • More than 500,000 18%

  9. Where do refugees go? 2012

  10. Definitions • Asylum Seeker – Someone who is fleeing persecution and has arrived in another country exercising their right to claim asylum • Refugee – Someone whose application has been successful and they are given the right to remain in the country they have sought asylum in • Refused asylum seeker – some whose claim has been refused and currently does not have an outstanding case • Economic Migrant – Someone who has chosen to travel to another country to seek employment

  11. Definition of a refugee • A refugee is as a person who has fled … due to a well-founded fear of persecution for reasons of • race • religion • nationality • membership of a particular social group • or political opinion Article 1, The 1951 Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees

  12. Different types of refugee protection • Refugee status • falls within the 1951 Convention definition • given 5 years to remain - extension or revocation after this • Prior to 2005 people were given Indefinite Leave to Remain • Humanitarian Protection (HP)/ Discretionary Leave • does not meet the 1951 Convention definition • But to return the person would violate the UK’s obligations under the Human Rights Act 1998, particularly article 3 (torture and inhuman and degrading treatment) or if the return would be unlawful or inappropriate • Granted for up to 3 years (although after this period it may be reviewed as to whether further protection is required).

  13. Migration in the UK – 2012 Population in mid 2012 = 63,700,000 Arrivals into the UK 497,000 Departures from the UK 321,000 Net migration 176,000 asylum seekers 27,978 (incl dependants) Source:Migration Statistics Quarterly Report August 2012 | 30 August 2012

  14. Asylum applications to the UK

  15. Asylum in the UK 2012 21,843 New claims for Asylum in the UK Granted leave to remain in UK 5,974 Refugees through resettlement programme 750 Source: Home Office, immigration statistics

  16. Asylum journey in the UK

  17. Asylum Support • UKBA supports adults and families • accommodation (inclusive of bills) • weekly cash support (section 95) • Local authority supports unaccompanied children

  18. Detention All asylum seeking adults and families are “Liable to be detained” • There is no statutory limit to the length of immigration detention • The decision to detain is made by an immigration officer or a case owner and is not automatically subject to independent review at any stage • The coalition government committed to ending the detention of children. At present they are running immigration removal pilots into alternatives

  19. Asylum journey in the UK

  20. Section 4 support • Taking all reasonable steps to leave the UK • Unable to leave the UK by reason of a physical impediment to travel or for some other medical reason, e.g. late stage of pregnancy • Unable to leave the UK because there is no viable route of return available • Have made an application for judicial review of a decision in relation to their asylum claim. • Require support in order to avoid a breach of a person’s rights under the European Convention on Human Rights, e.g. submitted a fresh claim

  21. Section 4 support • Accommodation (including bills) • £35.39 credited each week to the Azure card • NO CASH • Additional credits available for small children & pregnant women

  22. Destitution • Refugees • Refused asylum seekers, cannot get section 4 or social services support • Cannot return to their home country • Cannot get travel documents • Stateless – no country will accept them • UK Government policy

  23. Access to healthcare, Aug 2011 Refugee • access to all health care, same as any other resident Asylum seekers, refused asylum seekers appealing or on section 4, people who have been trafficked • entitled to register with a GP (at GP discretion) and to receive free NHS hospital treatment • exempt from charges for health care and prescriptions – need UKBA certificate HC2 Refused Asylum Seeker • Treatment already underway is completed free of charge • Prescriptions – need low income certificate HC1 • Other treatment will be charged Services free services to all • Accident and emergency • Family planning • Certain diseases (TB, Measles, pandemic flu) • Treatment for sexually transmitted diseases • HIV/AIDS treatment now free • Mental health treatment under court order

  24. Legal Advice Asylum seekers are entitled to FREE legal representation from: • A solicitor, or • An adviser who is officially regulated by the Office of the Immigration Services Commissioner (OISC)

  25. Any questions

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