Western Mail

Home Secretary may face legal action over Ukraine visas fiasco

- JAMME CREW, WILL JANES and MEG HILL newsdesk@walesonlin­e.co.uk

WOULD-BE sponsors under the Homes For Ukraine visa scheme are threatenin­g the UK Government with legal action on behalf of hundreds of refugees who have spent weeks waiting to come to the UK.

A class action lawsuit is being prepared over “inordinate and unreasonab­le delays” in processing hundreds of visa applicatio­ns made in March.

Figures shared with the PA news agency last week, compiled by would-be hosts, show there were at least 800 Ukrainian refugees still waiting for visas after applying within the first two weeks of the scheme opening.

It comes as Prime Minister Boris Johnson admitted that refugees could have been helped to get to the UK faster.

The groups behind the action, Vigil 4 Visas and Taking Action Over The Homes For Ukraine Visa Delays, say the delays have put people in Ukraine and border countries at risk, and heaped “considerab­le pressure and strain” on UK hosts.

Lawyers for the groups are planning to send a pre-action protocol letter to the Home Office this week, asking it to “sort out the endless muddles and tangles”.

They could then apply for a judicial review of the government’s visa-processing policy.

Katherine Klinger, who has helped organise vigils outside the Home Office over the past week, said: “Perhaps the most striking thing I’ve noticed is the utter despair, shame and sense of responsibi­lity so many hosts report. Hosts are in tears sometimes when they report to us what has happened in the past six weeks – dozens of emails, phone calls, letters, trips to the Home Office, MPs’ involvemen­t etc – it’s very humbling.”

The groups launched an online crowdfunde­r yesterday to raise up to £15,000 to help pay for the legal costs.

The crowdjusti­ce page reads: “If the Home Office does not get a grip on this urgent and potentiall­y catastroph­ic situation, we will bring our action for judicial review and ask that it is considered urgently in light of the vulnerabil­ity of so many of the March applicants.”

Mr Johnson said “large numbers” of those fleeing the war are now coming to Britain.

In an interview with Susanna Reid on ITV’s Good Morning Britain, he said: “So far 86,000 visas have been issued and 27,000 are already here and I want to say ‘thank you’ – 27,000 is a lot and it’s growing fast and I want to pay tribute to all those who are helping to look after Ukrainians.

“Could we have done it faster? Yes, perhaps we could.”

The legal letter will highlight 10 cases of Ukrainians who are still waiting for their visas after applying during the days after the Homes For Ukraine scheme first opened on March 18.

These include the case of a Ukrainian mother and her daughter, aged under 10, who applied for their visas around five weeks ago.

The mother received her visa on April 18 but the little girl is still waiting.

Moses Gibson and his wife, Nichola Merrick, who are sponsoring the mother and daughter, said the Ukrainian family are “very concerned and very jittery” about not having received permission to travel for the little girl.

The 51-year-old from Sandown, on the Isle of Wight, said he feels “jaded” after weeks of trying to resolve the situation.

He said: “We have contacted anything and anyone that we think can progress our case, and the wider social policy fallout of this dreadful and completely hopeless scheme.”

PA has reported on multiple similar cases where family members, usually young children, are waiting for longer than their relatives for permission to travel.

The legal action is being prepared by Amanda Jones, an immigratio­n and public law barrister, and follows a previous successful individual challenge, the group said.

Ms Jones challenged the UK Government on behalf of a member of the Marlow Ukraine Collective, who had been waiting more than a month to bring the family she is sponsoring to the UK.

Rebecca Lewis, a 44-year-old teacher from Marlow, Buckingham­shire, sought help after the mother she is sponsoring received her visa on April 9 but her children, aged four and five, were still waiting.

After Ms Jones contacted the government, within nine hours the family was told the remaining visas were ready, she said.

Ms Jones said the judicial review would be brought on the grounds that the Home Office has a policy of delaying the March applicatio­ns, and deciding later applicatio­ns instead – or that the system is “so chaotic and unstable” that it is unreasonab­le.

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Priti Patel
> Priti Patel

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