The truth about asylum (original) (raw)

The truth about asylum - Refugee Council

Refugee Coucil

Looking for the facts about asylum? The same old myths and scare stories about refugees and people seeking asylum are peddled again and again. You can rely on the facts and figures below to get the true picture—and help spread the truth about asylum.

1. People seeking asylum and refugees—who's who?

Refugee

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

“A person who owing to a well-founded fear of being persecuted for reasons of race, religion, nationality, membership of a particular social group or political opinion, is outside the country of his nationality and is unable or, owing to such fear, is unwilling to avail himself of the protection of that country; or who, not having a nationality and being outside the country of his former habitual residence as a result of such events, is unable or, owing to such fear, is unwilling to return to it.”

In the UK, a person becomes a refugee when government agrees that an individual who has applied for asylum meets the definition in the Refugee Convention they will “recognise” that person as a refugee and issue them with refugee status documentation.

Usually refugees in the UK are given five years leave to remain as a refugee. They must then apply for further leave, although their status as a refugee is not limited to five years.

Person seeking asylum

A person who has left their country of origin and formally applied for asylum in another country but whose application has not yet been concluded. Wherever possible, we prefer to describe someone as a person seeking asylum as we feel that the term “asylum seeker” is dehumanising.

Migrant

Someone who has moved to another country for other reasons, such as to find work.

Refused asylum applicant

A person whose asylum application has been unsuccessful and who has no other claim for protection awaiting a decision. Some people who have their case refused voluntarily return home, others are forcibly returned.

For some, it is not safe or practical to return until conditions in their country change.

2. Developing countries – not the UK – look after most of the world's refugees

72%

of refugees live in countries neighbouring their country of origin

1%

The UK is home to approx. 1% of the 27.1 million refugees who were forcibly displaced across the world.

3. People seeking asylum are looking for a place of safety

41%

of displaced people across the world are children

There is nothing in international law to say that refugees must claim asylum in the first country they reach. A European regulation allows countries in the EU to return an adult asylum applicant to the first European country they reached. This means that countries on the edge of Europe have responsibility for a lot more people seeking asylum than others. Some of the countries through which people travel to get to Europe are unsafe for some. Many have not signed the Refugee Convention, meaning that people who remain there will not get international protection and be able to rebuild their lives

4. Refugees make a huge contribution to the UK

5. The majority of asylum claims are successful

75%

of initial decisions made in 2022 resulted in a grant of asylum or other form of protection

6. People seeking asylum do not get large handouts from the state

£7

People seeking asylum are often living on Home Office support equivalent to under £7 per day

Give people seeking asylum the right to work

Most people seeking asylum are unable to work while their claim is being processed, which can take several months or years. They are forced to survive on under £6 per day. Leaving them struggling to support themselves and their families, while the Government wastes the talents of thousands of people.

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