From the BBC:
“Afghan refugees: Those who
worked for UK can stay permanently”
Afghans who worked for the British
military and UK government will be able to move to the UK permanently, the Home
Office has announced. Those eligible will be given indefinite leave to remain,
rather than the five years' residency previously offered. The UK evacuated more
than 8,000 people eligible for the Afghan Relocations and Assistance Policy
from 13 August. But Labour said more needed to be done for the many Afghans
whose lives were still at risk after being left behind. British troops left
Afghanistan over the weekend, bringing to an end the UK's 20-year military
involvement in Afghanistan. Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab said he couldn't
give a "definitive" figure for the number of people eligible to come
to the UK who remained in Afghanistan.
Announcing more details of its
plan called Operation Warm Welcome, the Home Office said it wanted to ensure
Afghans arriving in the UK received help to rebuild their lives. The Afghan
Relocations and Assistance Policy (ARAP) is for former locally employed staff
and their families whose lives had been assessed to be under serious threat
from the Taliban. The government said those who had already been relocated in
the UK with temporary residency could now upgrade their immigration status,
allowing them access to permanent jobs with unrestricted rights to work. Prime
Minister Boris Johnson said the UK owed an immense debt to those who worked
with the armed forces in Afghanistan. "I am determined that we give them
and their families the support they need to rebuild their lives here in the
UK," he said. "I know this will be an incredibly daunting time, but I
hope they will take heart from the wave of support and generosity already
expressed by the British public."
'The happiest moment of my
life' Burhan Vesal said boarding a plane to the UK with his wife and son
was the happiest moment of his life. He worked as an interpreter for the
British Army and took his family into hiding for fear the Taliban would kill
them. Mr Vesal said he had received permission to come to the UK a day
before the Taliban seized control of the capital, Kabul. He pleaded with
UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson to help them to evacuate and set off to the
airport not knowing if they would get in. "There was loads of
people, crowded area, so I just asked people, let me [through] because I have a
child and let me to go a little bit near to the soldiers. "When I
arrived I have faced the soldiers, the British soldiers. I told them that I
have a paper with me...so they help me." Mr Vesal and his family
were flown to the UK via Dubai. Now they are quarantining for 10 days.
More than 100 councils have come
forward to help families find homes, the Home Office said, with more than 2,000
places confirmed. The government has two schemes to resettle Afghans. It
is still developing the other - the Afghan Citizens' Resettlement Scheme -
which will aim to take in up to 20,000 refugees over the coming years, with a
focus on women and children, as well as religious and other minorities. Labour
MP Yvette Cooper, chairwoman of the Home Affairs Committee, said there were
still many people who helped the UK's work in Afghanistan, but who had not been
evacuated and were now at serious risk from the Taliban. "We have a
responsibility towards them, yet many are in limbo now because the evacuations
have ended but the Resettlement Scheme has not yet started. I have asked the
Home Office to confirm that the UK is still trying to help those families. "There
is a particular problem for those whose ARAP cases weren't processed in time,
or who couldn't get safely to the airport, or who worked on contract on UK
projects rather than being directly employed and whose lives are at risk. We
must ensure that those who worked with or for the UK government have a route to
safety."
The government's support as
part of Operation Warm Welcome also includes:
£12 million to help enrol
children in schools, and provide other support for learning
£3 million to the NHS so families
access healthcare and register with a GP
£5 million to support councils
across the UK in providing housing support
Funding for up to 300
undergraduate and postgraduate scholarships for Afghans at UK universities.
Adults will also be able to access English language courses free of charge
An online portal for members of
the public to register offers of support, such as jobs, accommodation and
donations of clothing and toys
Victoria Atkins, who has been
appointed Afghan Resettlement minister, said it was a "huge effort"
across government to make sure those fleeing Afghanistan were able to make a
success of a new life in the UK. "The stability of indefinite leave, the
security of access to healthcare and the opportunity of education are the
foundation upon which those resettled to the UK can build."
^ It’s important for the UK (and
the other countries like the US, Canada, etc.) who evacuated Afghanis who
worked from them to now provide them the basics to restart their lives. At the
same time these Governments need to work to get their own Citizens and Afghani
Allies out of Afghanistan. ^
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