The Sunday Telegraph

£350 to host refugees in your home as Britain opens its doors

Volunteers to sign up online with sponsored Ukrainians vetted ‘in days’, promises Michael Gove

- By Edward Malnick SUNDAY POLITICAL EDITOR and James Crisp EUROPE EDITOR

HOUSEHOLDS will be paid £350 per month to host refugees as part of an unpreceden­ted scheme that will see Britain open its doors to an unlimited number of Ukrainians fleeing the Russian onslaught.

The Homes for Ukraine scheme will initially allow people to sponsor named individual­s or families to stay in their home. It will then be opened up to charities, businesses and faith groups to sponsor large groups.

The scheme, which represents a radical departure from the Government’s earlier approach to the refugee crisis, would allow people in Britain to sponsor strangers they have discovered by trawling social media appeals by those fleeing Ukraine.

Members of the public will be able to fill out an “expression of interest” form from tomorrow, signing up with an email address to be kept up to date as the scheme launches.

Yesterday, Ukraine accused Russian forces of killing seven civilians in an attack on women and children trying to flee fighting near Kyiv. The Ukrainian intelligen­ce service said the seven, including a child, were killed as they fled the village of Peremoha and that “the occupiers forced the remnants of the column to turn back”.

Meanwhile, in a three-way phone call, Emmanuel Macron and Olaf Scholz, the leaders of France and Germany, urged Russian counterpar­t Vladimir Putin to end the deadly blockade of Mariupol.

The unveiling of the new scheme comes after MPs and Mr Macron criticised the Government’s initial offer to fleeing Ukrainians as inadequate, with Mr Macron accusing Britain of failing to live up to its “grand statements” on helping refugees from Ukraine.

Until now, the Home Office has only offered visas to refugees with family in the UK. It has been criticised for a “chaotic” roll-out of the family scheme, with Ukrainians said to be facing long delays and excessive bureaucrac­y.

The new scheme, which is expected to be open for the sponsorshi­p of individual­s by Friday, brings the country closer to the EU approach, which allows in Ukrainians for three years. In the EU, the refugees do not require visas.

Ukrainians who take part in the scheme will be allowed to remain in the UK for up to three years, with access to work, the NHS, and benefits – with the exception of housing benefits.

The Government said that those offering accommodat­ion would be “vetted” and Ukrainian applicants “will undergo security checks”. But a government source said each applicatio­n would be processed “in a matter of hopefully days”, allowing those being sponsored to board a flight or boat for Britain.

The source acknowledg­ed that the scheme may “sound a bit strange” and that there could be “a degree of failure with some of the matches” between sponsors and Ukrainians, but insisted: “We were trying to be led by what we can deliver quickly.”

The source added that the £350-permonth payment was “far cheaper” than the cost of hotel accommodat­ion, “which averages at about £200 per night”. The plan was drawn up by Michael Gove, the Secretary of State for Levelling Up, Housing and Communitie­s, who last night urged people in Britain to “give a safe home to those who so desperatel­y need it”.

Mr Gove said: “The crisis in Ukraine has sent shock waves across the world as hundreds of thousands of innocent people have [fled] their homes, leaving everything they know and love behind.

“The UK stands behind Ukraine in their darkest hour and the British public understand the need to get as many people to safety as quickly as we can.

“I urge people across the country to join the national effort and offer support to our Ukrainian friends.”

Today, Mr Gove will call for individual­s, landlords, businesses, community groups and other organisati­ons to offer rooms to Ukrainians.

Sponsors will be asked to provide homes or spare rooms rent-free for at least six months. They will receive £350 per month as a “thank you”.

The government source said that sponsors should not ask for rent payments but might ask for “a contributi­on to bills and food” once their lodgers “find their feet”.

The Government will also provide extra funding to local councils in the areas in which Ukrainian refugees are being accommodat­ed, to help fund the additional demand on public services.

Nicola Sturgeon and Mark Drakeford said Scotland and Wales were willing to become “super sponsors” for Ukrainian refugees.

Russian forces besieging the southern port city of Mariupol shelled a mosque sheltering more than 80 people including children, Ukraine said yesterday, as fighting raged on the outskirts of Kyiv, and Moscow kept up its bombardmen­t of other cities.

“They are bombing it [Mariupol] 24 hours a day, launching missiles. It is hatred. They kill children,” Volodymyr Zelensky, the Ukrainian president, said.

Russian troops massed close to Kyiv have fanned out around the capital in an attempted encircleme­nt. Mr Zelensky warned that Russia would have to “kill us all”, if they wanted to take Kyiv, where armed residents are preparing for an assault.

According to the UN, 2.6 million people have fled Ukraine, and the EU has warned that number could climb to five million in Europe. More than 1.4 million Ukrainians have crossed into Poland since the invasion began in the biggest exodus of refugees seen in the country since the Second World War.

Warsaw’s mayor has appealed for internatio­nal help as the city becomes overwhelme­d, with more than a tenth of all those fleeing arriving in the Polish capital. The Czech Republic has asked the European Union for temporary shelters to help it accommodat­e up to 50,000 refugees from Ukraine. More than 102,000 Ukrainian refugees have been registered in the country but the real number is thought to be at least 200,000.

 ?? ?? Women and children huddle in the corridor of a hospital in the Ukrainian city of Mariupol, which has been besieged by Russian forces for more than a week
Women and children huddle in the corridor of a hospital in the Ukrainian city of Mariupol, which has been besieged by Russian forces for more than a week

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