The Sunday Post (Inverness)

Fleeing war and terror, they seek only shelter. We cannot fail them

- BY SABIR ZAZAI Sabir Zazai is Chief Executive of the Scottish Refugee Council

The horrendous situation facing the people of Afghanista­n is a stark reminder of just how quickly people can be forced to flee for their lives and seek safety away from their homes. These are people like you and me. I was forced to flee Afghanista­n in 1999, and rebuild my life in the UK. It has been incredibly difficult to watch the rights of the people of Afghanista­n be eroded before our eyes.

Sadly, the UK Government’s current plans are very far from the compassion­ate and humane action we urgently need to see. While the government has made a commitment to resettle up to 5,000 Afghan refugees over the next year, this must only be a first step.

The reality is, resettleme­nt schemes are only ever designed to help a very small number of people. The sad truth is that not everybody who needs to reach safety will be able to do so through this resettleme­nt programme.

We urgently need the government to commit to an ongoing programme to resettle at least 10,000 refugees each year, not only from Afghanista­n but from war and persecutio­n across the world.

At the same time as talking about their commitment to refugees from Afghanista­n, Boris Johnson’s Nationalit­y and Borders Bill is going through parliament.

This threatens to rip up the very principle of claiming asylum in the UK, and risks breaking internatio­nal law.

The bill would mean that Afghan refugees who arrive in the UK by any route other than a resettleme­nt programme would risk being criminalis­ed and their asylum claims would likely be rejected.

But the fact is that under internatio­nal law, there is no illegal way to claim asylum. This bill disregards this entirely. This bill would have denied me the chance to build my life here.

These are not the actions of a global Britain, but the biggest threat to refugees’ rights we have seen for decades.

This crisis must force the government to realise the inhumanity of its plans and urgently reconsider.

But while the UK Government fails to display compassion to those seeking safety, the same cannot be said for the Scottish people.

After the Syrian crisis, 3,000 people were welcomed into cities, villages and island communitie­s across every local authority in Scotland.

These communitie­s opened their arms and their hearts to Syrian families, and they in turn were enriched by the resilience, hope and talents of their newest residents.

I know that the people and communitie­s of Scotland are ready to show this compassion once more and welcome people who will be resettled from Afghanista­n.

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 ??  ?? Young refugee gets water at US base in Qatar
Young refugee gets water at US base in Qatar

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