Michael Gove reveals ‘unlimited numbers’ of Ukrainians will be allowed to live in UK and use public services for up to three years as he vows to pay families £350 a month to open homes for at least six months
- The Housing Secretary announced the launch of the Homes for Ukraine scheme
- It will pay families £350-a-month to take in those fleeing Russian brutality
- Government faced continued criticism over speed and scope of refugee plans
Michael Gove appealed to Britons to open their homes to Ukrainian refugees today as he said a new scheme would allow an unlimited number to enter Britain to escape Putin’s bombs.
The Housing Secretary announced the launch of the Homes for Ukraine scheme that will pay families £350-a-month to take in those fleeing Russian brutality for at least six months.
He told the Commons that anyone who had lived in the UK for at least six months would be able to take in refugees, with those arriving eligible to stay for up to three years.
It came as the Government faced continued criticism over the speed and scope of its refugee plans.
Labour’s Lisa Nandy said the new plan was a ‘DIY asylum scheme’ and there was criticism that sponsors would have to know the name of the refugee they wished to house before they arrived.
Mr Gove told MPs: ‘Because we want the scheme to be up and running as soon as possible, Homes for Ukraine will initially facilitate sponsorship between people with known connections.
‘We will rapidly expand the scheme in a phased way with charities, churches and community groups to ensure many more prospective sponsors can be matched with Ukrainians who need help, and we are of course working closely with the devolved administrations to make sure that their kind offers of help are also mobilised.’
He added: ‘The British people have already opened their hearts in so many ways, I’m hopeful that many will also be ready to open their homes and to help those fleeing persecution find peace, healing and the prospect of a brighter future.’
He later revealed 1,500 people had signed up within the first hour.
The Housing Secretary announced the launch of the Homes for Ukraine scheme that will pay families £350-a-month to take in those fleeing Russian brutality for at least six months.
Labour’s Lisa Nandy said the new plan was a ‘DIY asylum scheme’ and there was criticism that sponsors would have to know the name of the refugee they wished to house before they arrived.
What are the rules for accepting Ukrainian refugees?
- Sponsors will have to provide accommodation for a minimum of six months.
- The Government will provide a monthly payment of £350 to sponsors per family they look after.
- The payments are tax-free and will not affect benefit entitlement or council tax status.
- Ukrainians arriving in the UK will also have access to the full range of public services, doctors and schools for up to three years
- Sponsors will need to undergo criminal record vetting before accepting refugees.
- Anyone who has lived in the UK legally for at least six months can apply to take in a refugee
- The hosts do not have to be British citizens
- Prospective sponsors should register at the Homes for Ukraine website
Ms Nandy raised concerns over matching Ukrainian families to sponsors and claimed the Government was suggesting people should advertise on Instagram via a ‘DIY asylum scheme’.
She told the Commons: ‘On his tour of the TV studios, he suggested several times that people who are willing to sponsor a Ukrainian family need to come to the Government with the name of that family who will then rubber stamp it.
‘He can’t seriously be asking Ukrainian families who are fleeing Vladimir Putin, who have left their homes with nothing, to get on to Instagram and advertise themselves in the hope a British family might notice them. Is this genuinely the extent of this scheme?’
The programme to allow British families to take in Ukrainians fleeing the war starts today – but only allows them to take in refugees if they know their name.
Critics have attacked a ‘bureaucratic hurdle’ that means that families wanting to get involved with Homes for Ukraine have to know who they are taking in by name before they arrive.
Hosts will also have to undergo criminal records checks first, with Health Secretary Sajid Javid saying a ‘basic level of security checks’ would apply.
The Home Office has issued 4,000 visas so far under the Ukraine Family Scheme. According to data published on its website, 17,100 applications have been submitted and 10,600 appointments have been made at visa processing centres.
Downing Street this morning indicated that the Prime Minister will not be taking in any Ukrainian refugees in No10.
His spokesman said it was down to individual ministers whether they chose to give accommodation to a refugee.
Cabinet minister Grant Shapps revealed his family plans to take in Ukrainian refugees today – as Downing Street suggested that Russian oligarchs’ UK mansions could be used to shelter those fleeing Putin’s troops.
The Transport Secretary said he would be among those registering on the Homes for Ukraine programme launched this morning to make it easier for displaced people to enter Britain.
But he is so far the only minister to join the programme. Downing Street today effectively ruled out the PM sheltering people in No10, while other ministers were tepid on the idea when asked.
Health Secretary Sajid Javid said he was ‘starting to have a conversation’ with his wife but said it ‘will be hard to offer the time that I think a host would reasonably (be) expected to have available’. Levelling-Up Minister Michael Gove last night said he was ‘exploring what I can do’.
Labour’s London mayor Sadiq Khan also ruled it out on security as well as space grounds.
But former health secretary Matt Hancock said he would also be taking part, allowing refugees to stay in his constituency home in West Suffolk, saying: ‘I urge everyone who is able to help to register and welcome a family in desperate need.’
Downing Street suggested it could look at altering the law to allow Russian-owned mansions to be used to house refugees. The Prime Minister’s official spokesman said: ‘Certainly that’s something we are looking at.’
It came as riot police today stormed the £50million Belgravia ‘crash pad’ of a sanctioned Russian oligarch to seize it back from protesters who invaded the property to ‘house Ukrainian refugees’.
At least five activists broke into 5 Belgrave Square just after midnight before hanging a Ukrainian flag and a banner reading, ‘The property has been liberated’, as they vowed to stay until Vladimir Putin ended his invasion.
This morning, Mr Shapps tweeted: ‘We’ve spent the past few weeks as a family discussing the devastating situation in Ukraine, and so we intend to apply today to join other UK households in offering our home to provide refuge to Ukrainians until it is safe for them to return to their country.’
Mr Shapps lives in Hertfordshire with his wife Belinda. They have three children, a son Hadley and twins Tabytha and Noa.
‘There are specific challenges around security on housing people in No 10,’ the spokesman said.
‘Various ministers have been asked about this. Obviously it will come down to individual circumstances. This is a significant commitment.’
Mr Javid said the Ukraine Family Scheme for refugees was ‘being made easier and more straightforward’ from Tuesday.
He told Times Radio hosts found face Disclosure and Barring Service (DBS) checks, adding: ‘I think that is right because you want to get the right balance between sort of speed and the people that we’re trying to help are in a desperate situation, and you want to bring that help as quickly as possible, but also do some basic checks and I think what we have done here is the right balance.’
It came as charities warned that the new plan to house refugees with volunteer families could risk the safety of unaccompanied children if not done properly.
A spokesperson for the National Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children (NSPCC) said the charity did not want to see ‘unnecessary barriers’ built into the process, but ‘it is vital child protection is built into every stage of the Government’s and local authorities’ response to this crisis’.
There have been also concerns about the tight timeframe the Government has provided, with the NSPCC in its statement calling it an ‘ambitious turnaround’.
The charity said it was ‘essential that the Government works closely with local authorities, the fostering community, charities and other key local partners to ensure this sponsorship scheme is ultimately safe; has appropriate levels of support for traumatised Ukrainian children who have fled bloodshed, and on-going assistance available for their sponsors’.
Levelling Up Secretary Michael Gove last night said the process of matching Britons with people fleeing the conflict will take place from Friday, while he expects the first refugees to use the new route will make their way to the UK by the end of the week.
The Homes for Ukraine programme will allow individuals, charities, community groups and businesses to bring people escaping the war to safety – even if they have no ties to the UK.
Anyone with a room or home available can offer it to a Ukrainian individual or a family, though those offering will be vetted and Ukrainian applicants will undergo security checks.
Members of the public will be able to nominate a Ukrainian family to stay with them for at least six months.
Sponsored Ukrainians will be granted three years’ leave to remain in the UK, with entitlement to work and access public services.
The exact detail is not known, but Mr Gove has said steps will be taken to ensure people who might be ‘intent on exploitation’ are prevented from ‘abusing’ the new scheme.
Britons offering accommodation to Ukrainian refugees will receive a ‘thank you’ payment of £350 per month.
The Home Office has issued 4,000 visas so far under the Ukraine Family Scheme. According to data published on its website, 17,100 applications have been submitted and 10,600 appointments have been made at visa processing centres.
Riot police storm oligarch’s £50m London home to evict squatters vowing to rehouse refugees
Riot police today stormed the £50million Belgravia ‘crash pad’ of a sanctioned Russian oligarch to seize it back from protesters who invaded the property to ‘house Ukrainian refugees’.
At least five activists broke into 5 Belgrave Square just after midnight before hanging a Ukrainian flag and a banner reading, ‘The property has been liberated’, as they vowed to stay until Vladimir Putin ended his invasion.
The mansion belongs to the family of oil tycoon Oleg Deripaska, one of seven oligarchs who were sanctioned by the UK government last week for being ‘pro-Kremlin’ and ‘closely associated’ with Putin.
Deripaska has intimate links with the British establishment, with Peter Mandelson and George Osborne previously visiting his £80million superyacht in Corfu.
At around midday, police officers wearing helmets and safety harnesses used a ladder and a JCB cherry picker to access the mansion’s balcony, with two of the protesters trying to make a barricade out of potted plants.
Officers then used a drill to break open the front door, while activists shouted, ‘Go away you losers’ and ‘you fascist scumbags’ from the balcony above.
The squatters call themselves the London Mahknovists – after Nestor Makhno, who led an anarchist force that attempted to form a stateless society in Ukraine during the Russian Revolution of 1917-1923.
At one point, two of the activists shared a drink from a single glass while one man sang: ‘I’ve had the time of my life’, from the Dirty Dancing soundtrack.
Another shouted to people looking out of the window of the building next door: ‘We are your new neighbours. We’ll come around tomorrow with some brisket.’
Local authority areas will be entitled to more than £10,000 per Ukrainian refugee using the fresh route to the UK.
The Health Secretary said he was considering whether he was able to host Ukrainian refugees in his home.
Sajid Javid told BBC Breakfast: ‘I’m starting to have a conversation with my wife on that and I think many households – as you say, and I’m pleased you brought this up – are probably thinking about this across the country.
‘It’s important that anyone that becomes a host that they can fulfil the obligations of a host, that they can spend time with these families and help, but there are many ways that we can all help and whatever I do at a personal level, I will most certainly be helping.’
Mr Gove has said he would personally take in a Ukrainian refugee and Academy Award-nominated actor Benedict Cumberbatch said from the Baftas red carpet on Sunday that he hopes to take part in the scheme.
But there has been criticism too, with the Refugee Council noting unlike the UK all EU countries have waived visa requirements for Ukrainians in the short term.
Council chief executive Enver Solomon told The Guardian the UK scheme was ‘effectively a managed migration route, which is not suitable to use to respond to a humanitarian crisis’.
Mr Solomon also said the programme should only be one part of Britain’s response to the crisis.
‘But if it’s going to work, it needs to be delivered with all the right resource and all the necessary entitlements for Ukrainians – so they’re able to get all the healthcare they need, access housing benefit – because the reality is, the sponsor arrangement will be a short-term measure,’ he said.
‘This conflict doesn’t look like it’s going to end quickly. There needs to be a clear pathway to longer-term accommodations.’
London Mayor Sadiq Khan said the UK’s response to the Ukraine refugee crisis has been ’embarrassing’ compared to that of other countries.
Asked if he would be willing to host a refugee, Mr Khan told Good Morning Britain: ‘Personally we won’t be able to because of space and other security issues, but I admire the generosity of those Londoners, and we know our city is a very generous city.’
He said the visa system must be simplified as it is ‘far too complicated for those from Ukraine to come to London, and our country’.
He added: ‘Councils are ready to step up, hotels are ready to step up, businesses are ready to step up, Londoners are ready to step up.
London Mayor Sadiq Khan said the UK’s response to the Ukraine refugee crisis has been ’embarrassing’ compared to that of other countries.
‘The issue now is the delay in the visas but also we need to make sure there’s the right support, the wrap-around care.
‘Many of these people will be traumatised, they need medical support. The children will need spaces in schools. We need to make sure English is available to those who can’t speak English. We need to make sure they can work straight away, those with the skills.
‘With the right support, with the visas being sorted out, we should be able to do at least what Germany and France and Italy and Spain and others have been doing. It’s embarrassing when you compare what little we’ve done with most of what our neighbours have done.’
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