2023 has been an incredibly tough year for anyone working on the frontline in the asylum, refugee and migration sector, and of course particularly for those who are directly impacted by the ever-more cruel and chaotic rhetoric, policies and practice that have come from Westminster as the year has progressed.
In an ongoing and deepening hostile environment for refugees and other migrants in the UK, one thing after the next has been thrown our way – sometimes unexpected and illogical, sometimes completely predictable – but all deeply harmful.
This year has been dominated by the dreadful, verging on farcical, political theatre that is the Rwanda plan, a key facet of the unconscionable Illegal Migration Act (IMA). The intention that sits behind both these pieces of legislation is very far from farce, however. Both aim to strip refugees of dignity and humanity. They tell us refugees are a burden, are illegal and should not be here. They tell us people should not seek safety here. They are eye-wateringly expensive, unworkable and ineffective. And they tell us that we are not a country of competence or compassion.
They also send a chilling message to every single one of us – that basic human rights and the rule of law can be conveniently disregarded when they get in the way of political ideology.
Change a Big Issue vendor’s life this Christmas by purchasing a Winter Support Kit. You’ll receive four copies of the magazine and create a brighter future for our vendors through Christmas and beyond.
This has also been the year when the government seemed to lose control of how to manage the asylum estate, a problem primarily caused by the Home Office’s seeming unwillingness or inability to process asylum claims for so long. We had far-right attacks on asylum hotels. We had the Bibby Stockholm barge, that floating monument to performative cruelty and poor management. We had plans put forward to exempt asylum accommodation from Houses of Multiple Occupation (HMO) licensing that was designed to help local authorities keep people safe and landlords in check. All while enabling private companies to make huge profits.