Eastern Eye (UK)

NHS surcharge reversal was ‘right thing to do’

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BRITAIN last Thursday (21) announced that foreign care workers would be exempt from a charge imposed on migrants to fund the health service, after an outcry sparked by the coronaviru­s outbreak.

Prime minister Boris Johnson had defended the immigratio­n health surcharge as recently as last Wednesday (20), saying it raised much-needed funds for the NHS.

But Sir Keir Starmer, the new Labour leader, condemned the levy at a time when so many foreign NHS and social care workers are on the frontline of the Covid-19 response.

He quoted a letter from the Doctors’ Associatio­n, an industry body, saying the tax was “a gross insult to all”.

A spokesman for the prime minister said all NHS and care staff, including porters and cleaners, will now be exempt.

“The purpose of the NHS surcharge is to benefit the NHS, help to care for the sick and save lives,” he said. “NHS and care workers from abroad who are granted visas are doing this already by the fantastic contributi­on which they make.”

Sir Keir said the decision was “a victory for common decency and the right thing to do”.

Noting that it came just hours before the weekly tribute to frontline staff, he added: “We cannot clap our carers one day and then charge them to use our NHS the next.”

The decision is the second change of policy towards foreign workers in 24 hours.

Last Wednesday, the government expanded a bereavemen­t scheme allowing families and dependents of migrant NHS staff who die from coronaviru­s to stay in Britain, after criticism that care workers, cleaners and porters were left out.

The government has heaped praise on the NHS for the way it is coping with coronaviru­s, which has killed more than 36,000 people in Britain.

But critics say a decade of spending cuts had left the service stretched to the limit when the outbreak erupted.

Johnson told MPs last Wednesday that during his time in intensive care with Covid-19 last month, he was a “personal beneficiar­y of carers who have come from abroad and frankly saved my life”.

But he said: “We must look at the realities. This is a great national service – a national institutio­n – that needs funding.”

The immigratio­n health surcharge was introduced by the Conservati­ves in 2015 and is currently £400 a year, rising to £624 in October.

 ??  ?? FUNDING CALL: Boris Johnson
FUNDING CALL: Boris Johnson

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