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 Hello!
I do hope that you have all had a super weekend. This email was supposed to have been sent  on Friday.  Apologies for the delay.

1 Treberfydd House gardens are open to the public for the next two weeks. I intended to let you know sooner as this started on Saturday .
From 20-31 July, visits must be booked preferably by emailing info@treberfydd.com, otherwise by calling
07796 897540 to book a date and time[ Between 1pm and 5pm] .
Entry free, but donations invited for Hay, Brecon and Talgarth
Sanctuary for Refugees.
You are welcome to take a picnic with you. They will have some tables, set well apart, with chairs.
Location: the postcode is LD3 7PX. See www.treberfydd.com for beautiful photos of the grounds. Its well worth a visit and you can help us as well!

2 M is moving!  After lots of near plans came to nothing, via email links a friend of a friend of Trish kindly offered M a place to stay for 2 months!!  Thanks to Ruth, M has a super new home. He may be moved by the Home Office soon anyway but it is good that for now he has security and knows that he is wanted and cared for.
3 Some of you may recall that last year we made a donation to a  London group  called Hopetowns  founded by a man,  Samer, who was based in Swansea for 6 months prior to being awarded refugee status. His group offers support,  friendship and English tuition to aid integration. We supported it as we knew people were sent from south Wales to London and hoped Hopetowns might help them.
They do have an appeal again this year to try to pay for rent and materials but that's not really why I'm mentioning them.
Kelly in Swansea who has been buying the  top ups that are so helpful to people seeking asylum, contacted me two weeks ago as she was concerned about a friend who had been moved to London by the Home office. He was feeling very distressed. I was able to put Samer in touch with him  and now he knows a number of other people and talks more positively of the future. Kelly was delighted with this example of networking and I have her permission and that of her friend to mention this.
4 With Lockdown gradually being lifted ,Lawrence  was  able to take some bedding, kitchen equipment and furniture down to Otis who has moved into his own  unfurnished flat. Thanks to Mark, Sylvia, Seza, Sue, Maria, Jane, Claire and others who helped with items or cash. This was also an opportunity to leave a parcel of curtains for Maria who wanted them for a man who is also just moving into a new flat with large windows.
Miv took a load of bikes to Mark in Newport -  featured recently on TV with the bikes project  that is increasingly run [with a big input from Mark]  by people seeking asylum for others seeking asylum and also helping to mend bikes for others in the community. The help  from Sean, Drovers Cycles, Lawrence  and the many donors makes this possible.
Kev from Swansea Re-Cycle came up to pick up another load of bikes late last week and also took a box to Unity in Diversity with some lovely  donated merchandise from Hay Festival  [also Miv took one to  Newport].  It is very kind of Hay to share  their  T shirts and books with people who are so very much less fortunate. 
Next week we hope to take down a load of 150ml bottles of Hand sanitiser  and some re-usable masks for distribution by Unity in Diversity and also Newport Gap Sanctuary. We'd had kind offers of bottle filling sessions [ thanks Carola, Mac, Erica and others] but were able to find a local supplier of prefilled 150 ml bottles of alcohol gel for 90p each [for purchases of over 500.]
5 Thanu has written a lovely article about her experience of lockdown.
Also her garden design has been used for a garden in Swansea celebrating 10 years of being a City of Sanctuary. We've sent her our congratulations. She is working hard from home as the Covid Crisis Project  Admin Officer for EYST. This link   will also show you articles by Saba and Carlos.
6 Mask making continues and If you want 3 lovely handmade re-usable masks I can refer you to Janet who will help to arrange these for you.
 And Finally I've included some petitions and reading from Asylum Matters below in case you need something to keep you very busy. And if that isn't enough City of Sanctuary's July newsletter is here
 
And please, don't forget that our next meeting is via Zoom on 5th August
all good wishes,
 Ailsa


 
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 Details from Asylum Matters
1 Ongoing advocacy
NAO Report and Wake Up Call 
On Friday 3 July, Asylum Matters joined with 41 partner organisations to publish Wake Up Call, a new report based on evidence submitted to the National Audit Office (NAO) during its recent investigation into the Home Office’s new asylum support and accommodation contracts.
 
The report sets out how problems that arose during the transition to the new contracts almost fatally disrupted the asylum support system, which they point out has operated on a knife edge and has lurched from crisis to crisis over many years. 
 
Evidence presented to the NAO and set out in the report revealed problems with:
  • Impossible hold times on the advice line: One charity said it had to wait 13 hours 40 minutes on hold between just three clients;
  • Appalling delays receiving asylum support: Refugee Action said it took on average 40 days for destitute people it supported to receive financial support and/or accommodation between July 2019 and January 2020. It added on average people waited an extra 15 days to receive their prepaid Aspen cards, which are used by people seeking asylum to shop;
  • Terrible accommodation standards: one charity said a family with a disabled daughter was moved to a flat on the fourth floor; in another case a mother and her child were sent to a home without any furnishings, white goods, or equipment to cook;
  • Long stays in contingency accommodation: during the troubled transition the new contractors began using more contingency accommodation to house people, resulting in a lack of dignity for people in such accommodation, risks to mental and physical health, and people living in unsuitable accommodation for lengthy periods.
Many of these problems are reflected in the NAO’s own report, also published on 3 July, which reiterates that during the transition, people seeking asylum faced difficulties accessing appropriate accommodation and specialist support and advice. 
 
Wake Up Call highlights the need for lessons to be learned by the Home Office from these severe failings; otherwise we risk a return to business as usual as we begin to emerge out of lockdown.  The report maintains that there are systemic problems with these contracts and with the asylum support and accommodation systems, that too often result in the needs of people seeking asylum not being met, and therefore systemic solutions are required. 
 
Government announces it will act on all 30 Windrush recommendations 
Two days after Wendy Williams - the author of the Lessons Learned review - warned of a “grave risk” of a similar scandal to Windrush if action wasn’t taken, the UK Government said it will act on all 30 of the recommendations in the review.
 
Crisis convenes joint letter to No 10 on homelessness
The charity Crisis has convened a joint letter (to which Asylum Matters is among more than 40 signatories) calling on the Prime Minister to urgently introduce emergency homelessness legislation to protect people facing homelessness during the coronavirus pandemic. The letter has been shared on social media and was covered by media outlets including Sky News. 
 
 
Refugee Council launches new action on evictions threat
Amid the ongoing threat that newly recognised refugees will soon be evicted from asylum accommodation, the Refugee Council has launched an urgent action, urging people to sign a call to the UK Government to ensure everyone’s safety.
 
Refugee Action launches new action on asylum support rates 
Following the Home Office’s announcement of a £1.85 uplift in asylum support rates, Refugee Action has launched a new write to MP action, asking them to demand this pitiful increase in asylum support be urgently reviewed. 
 
They’ve also produced a new Twitter animation, highlighting that it would take 115 days for someone to save the additional 26p a day to pay for the cheapest set of face masks. 
 
Domestic Abuse and Immigration Bills 
We were hugely disappointed to see that proposals to extend legal protections from domestic abuse to migrant women were not supported in parliament on Monday. A large coalition of women's, refugee and migrant and other groups had pressed MPs to support amendments to the Domestic Abuse Bill, to provide protection from abuse for all women, regardless of their immigration status. 
 
It comes a week after the double disappointment of defeats in the House of Commons on amendments to the Government's Immigration Bill on ending indefinite detention; and protecting refugee family reunification following the UK's departure from the EU. This came despite strong campaigning and cross-party support for amendments on both subjects.

2. Research and Reports 
Runnymede report on immigration and the lottery of belonging
Runnymede has published a brilliant series of essays and reflections on various aspects of migration policy, including destitution, detention and the hostile environment.
 
NRPF report from Citizens Advice 
Citizens Advice has released a new report - ‘Nowhere to Turn’ - on how immigration rules are preventing people from getting the support they need during the COVID-19 pandemic. They state that benefit restrictions and minimum income requirements have forced many migrants to continue working when it has been unsafe to do so. 
 
Data from their services also demonstrate the disproportionate impact the pandemic has had on people of colour. They report a 110% rise in inquiries about NRPF and non-EU migrants’ access to benefits, 82% of which have come from people of colour. 
 
Citizens Advice have called for a temporary suspension of certain immigration rules, including NRPF conditions, the Habitual Residence Test, and the minimum income requirement for those renewing family visas. Additionally, they call for those on a 5 year route to settlement not to be forced onto a 10 year route if they are unable to show minimum income.  
 
Jesuit Refugee Service UK publish new report on detention 
JRS UK have published ‘Detained and Dehumanised: the impact of immigration detention’, drawing on the accounts of 27 forcibly displaced people supported by the organisation, who have direct experience of immigration detention. 
 
3. Home Office and Government developments
Glasgow attack
Along with colleagues across Scotland and the whole of the UK, we were devastated to learn of the violent attack of 26 June at the Park Inn hotel in Glasgow. 
 
An urgent debate took place in the House of Commons on 29 June in response to the tragedy, covering issues relating to asylum accommodation both specific to events in Glasgow and more widely. Subsequently a temporary pause on asylum dispersal to Glasgow has been put in place. 
 
Following the incident an incredible response has been mounted in the city by organisations and groups - including but not limited to MORE, The Unity Centre, No Evictions, Scottish Refugee Council, Positive Action in Housing alongside many others - have worked together and with the statutory authorities to rapidly coordinate support to people affected; while a newly formed group - Refugees for Justice - has published a manifesto. 
 
Our thoughts and good wishes remain with all those affected and everyone supporting them at this incredibly challenging and painful time.
 
Further reports on threat of eviction of refugees from asylum accommodation
The Independent and Inside Housing are among media outlets which have reported on the Home Office's intention not to extend the suspension on evictions from asylum accommodation beyond the end of June. Charities, including NACCOM and the Refugee Council, warned that this will result in refugees being forced into homelessness during the COVID pandemic. 
 
The Home Office states that it has decided to resume the move-on process by giving notice to those whose asylum claims have been concluded; and that this will resume in a "measured, phased and careful way", with further details yet to be confirmed. The department has stated in media comments and on Twitter that this process has not yet started. 
 
Enforced destitution is never acceptable, not least during a public health crisis. The current lack of certainty on the Government's timescales means that many people in asylum accommodation remain in a state of limbo, not knowing what will happen next. 
 
Asylum Matters and NACCOM are calling on the Home Office to urgently take urgent action to protect people seeking asylum from homelessness during the pandemic and beyond. This includes a further suspension of evictions into homelessness; emergency temporary legislation that allows and funds local authorities to provide emergency housing to anyone at risk of homelessness (regardless of immigration status); and a permanent end to No Recourse to Public Funds conditions. You can read a position paper here. 
 
 
If you’re interested in working with Asylum Matters and NACCOM to protect people seeking asylum from destitution, please get in touch with us at info@asylummatters.org. 
 
MHCLG announces further funding 
The Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government (MHCLG) has announced a further £105 million to “keep rough sleepers safe and off the streets during the coronavirus pandemic.” This interim funding is proposed to support the 15,000 people accommodated through the ‘Everyone In’ initiative at the beginning of the pandemic. 
 
However, it remains unclear whether this funding can be used to support people with No Recourse to Public funds, despite reports suggesting that a large proportion of those accommodated through ‘Everyone In’ are subject to NRPF conditions. 
 
Organisations and local authorities have called for further clarity on this new funding, particularly as to whether it can be used to support those with NRPF. The Local Government Association has also responded to the announcement with a renewed call for a temporary suspension of NRPF conditions during the pandemic. 
 
4. Resources and what we’ve been reading
  • Hackney Migrant Centre, UK Sustain and Project 17 have produced a flyer about eligibility for free school meals in England, to ensure that all families who need it don’t miss out on vital support.
  • CARAG have launched a brilliant podcast series - Still We Rise - where they are joined by guest speakers and members to talk about their journeys towards a better life, the struggles they face in the UK and the successes they achieve. Episode 1 speaks about the struggles of people forced to live on barely £5 a day on asylum support.  
  • The Coventry Telegraph has reported on local MP Taiwo Owatemi’s support for the Lift The Ban campaign, and her contribution on the right to work for people seeking asylum during the Committee stage of the Immigration Bill. The article also shares insight on the impact of the current rules from the Coventry Refugee and Migrant Centre.
 
HBTSR exists to show and promote support for people forced to seek sanctuary by offering time out to people in need, raising money to help other groups who assist and support and by asking for more humane policies for people seeking sanctuary.
 
Website: www.hbtsr.org.uk

Twitter account: @hbts4refugees

Please see our Facebook Page


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HBTS4refugees · twitter account @hbts4refugees · 1b The Pavement · Hay on Wye, Powys HR3 5BU · United Kingdom

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