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#Refugees #GE24 – Manifesto Pledges

This is Refugee Week, 17th – 23rd June, and as we’re right into the hot bed of electioneering let’s see what the main political parties have to say about their international responsibilities to people fleeing from conflict, war and persecution.

Kindertransport monument at Liverpool Street Station. A project established by the Association of Jewish Refugees, it pays tribute to those Britons who aided the rescue of 10,000 Jewish children from the Nazi persecution which led onto the holocaust. (https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/User:Wjh31)

What is a refugee?

The definition of a refugee according to the 1951 United Nations Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees is:

It was the appalling genocide of the holocaust and the massive displacement of peoples, mainly across Europe, in the aftermath of World War 2 that led to the  1948 Universal Declaration of Human Rights.  Article 14 of the Declaration states: “Everyone has the right to seek and enjoy in other countries asylum from persecution.”

What’s in the Manifestos?

The Conservatives: ‘Clear Plan, Bold Action, Secure Future’

The Tories pledge to:

The Tory manifesto describes desperate people as ‘illegal’. The Illegal Migration Act was passed by the UK Parliament in 2023. It changes the law so that those who arrive in the UK ‘illegally’ will not be able to stay here and will instead be detained and then promptly removed, either to their home country or a safe third country. The British Institute of Human Rights
(BIHR) expressed serious human rights concerns over the Act.

The group ‘Freedom From Torture’ state that: “Most people seeking asylum have little choice but to take dangerous journeys and don’t have the option to use the Government’s so-called ‘safe and legal routes’. Internationally, less than 1% of the world’s refugees can access resettlement schemes run by the UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR). No refugee visa exists for people who need to quickly leave their country and airlines get fined if they allow refugees to travel to the UK without valid visas.

“Historically, when a country becomes unsafe and begins to produce refugees, the UK will start denying those nationals visas that would allow people to access planes and arrive in the UK quickly and safely as a means of seeking safety (applying for asylum) – this happened at the beginning of the Syrian conflict in 2015.”

On the new agreement reached with Albania by the UK Tory Government, Law Centres state that: “The government’s own country information indicates that Albania has significant and longstanding issues related to corruption, trafficking, blood feuds, discrimination and violence against the LGBTQI community, stigma and discrimination against the Roma community, gang-related violence, and sexual and domestic violence that the Albanian government appears either unable or unwilling to resolve. Read more on MiCLU’s website: Is Albania a Safe Country? 

Labour., ‘Change’

What does Labour pledge to do in its manifesto with regards to refugees ?

Priority number 3 is Launch a new Border Security Command with hundreds of new specialist investigators and use counter-terror powers to smash criminal boat gangs

It states:  the system needs to be controlled and managed and we need strong borders. The small boats crisis, fuelled by dangerous criminal smuggler gangs, is undermining our security and costing lives

Scottish National Party (SNP) ‘A Future Made In Scotland’

The SNP describe the UK Rwanda Scheme as ‘morally repugnant’ and pledge to:

Liberal Democrats ‘For A Fair Deal’

The Liberal Democrats pledge to:

Scottish Green Party  ‘Vote Like Our Future Depends On It’

The Scottish Greens pledge to: ” abolish the racist Home Office, repeal the Rwanda Act and other Tory legislation that has embedded racism into Asylum and Immigration policy, and remove the Tory’s punitive income requirements for spousal visas.”

The theme of Refugee Week this year is ‘Our Home’ – that’s not about sending people back to where they came from where they are in danger, but about providing them with a safe refuge.

From the language and pledges of the Manifestos published above, which political parties are responding with humanity to the plight of refugees.

The candidates standing in the Orkney & Shetland Constituency at the General Election on 4th July are as follows:

Fiona Grahame

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