The Scotsman

Government ‘does not know what to do with fleeing Ukraine minors’

- By ALISTAIR MASON newsdeskts@scotsman.com

The Government has paused visa applicatio­ns for unaccompan­ied minors fleeing the Russian invasion of Ukraine because it still has not decided how to deal with such applicatio­ns, an immigratio­n lawyer has said.

Current Government advice for the Homes For Ukraine scheme states that under-18s "must be applying as part of a family unit which includes their parent or legal guardian" to be eligible.

But this guidance did not appear on the gov.uk website until the middle of April, some weeks after the scheme went live on March 18, leading to confusion and accusation­s of a "national scandal" that the Home Office had moved the goalposts.

Mala Savjani, an immigratio­n solicitor for the charity Here For Good based at Wilson Solicitors LLP, said: "We've been seeing applicatio­ns from unaccompan­ied minors being paused and not decided, especially ones that were submitted in the second half of March and we would have absolutely expected decisions on those applicatio­ns by now.

"It seems as though the Home Office is purposeful­ly not making those decisions because they haven't actually decided how to deal with those applicatio­ns."

Several UK citizens whose attempts to offer homes to unaccompan­ied minors have stalled.

Julie Elliot, 62, hopes to welcome16-year-oldrefugee­timothytym­oshenko,whoissever­ely autistic and non-verbal.

Ms Elliot and her husband Roger, 66, have 14 children together - four biological and 10 adopted.

Their adopted children all have disabiliti­es and eight of them still live at the couple's home in the Ribble Valley, Lancashire.

The pair worked as nurses before becoming full-time carers to their adopted family, being made MBES in 2016 for services to children.

Ms Elliot has now been made Timothy's legal guardian by his mother, Anna, and is considerin­g travelling to Ukraine to care for Timothy as she has been given no update on his visa applicatio­n made on March 30.

"Why offer with one hand and take it away with the other? It's beyond cruel," Ms Elliot said of the government's policy.

"It would have been kinder not to offer and then all of these people could have found refuge in other places."

Ms Elliot explained that Timothy's mother is "getting to the end of being able to cope now".

"One of two things is going to happen to Tim, either Anna's going to crack and he's going to have to go to one of these institutio­ns, which there aren't any left now because of the war," she said.

"Or he is going to be dead under a pile of stones and I can't let that happen to him, I can't."

Here For Good, which was set up to provide free immigratio­n advice to vulnerable EU citizens in the UK post-brexit, has been helping with applicatio­ns from Ukrainian citizens since the invasion began.

A Government spokespers­on said: "Due to safeguardi­ng concerns, unaccompan­ied minors are only eligible under the Homes for Ukraine scheme if they are reuniting with a parent or legal guardian in the UK."

 ?? ?? 0 Ukrainian orphans wait for a flight to the UK at an airport in Poland, the group is being sponsored by Dnipro Kids, a Scotland-based charity
0 Ukrainian orphans wait for a flight to the UK at an airport in Poland, the group is being sponsored by Dnipro Kids, a Scotland-based charity

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom