Sir Keir Starmer condemns 'inhuman' idea of placing asylum centres on disused ferries

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Keir Starmer has condemned as "inhuman" reports that the Government is considering placing asylum processing centres on disused ferries.

The Labour leader told the Home Office to "get your house in order" as he also responded to reports that the Government is considering processing asylum seekers on the remote UK territory, Ascension Island, in the Atlantic Ocean.

It comes as the Home Office's top civil servant, Matthew Rycroft, said the Cabinet Office has launched an investigation into the leaks on ideas of how to process asylum seekers.

Sir Keir told reporters in Westminster: “This isn’t creative thinking, this is lurching from one ridiculous proposition to the next – these suggestions are inhuman and the Government shouldn’t be pursuing them.

“Everybody knows that the biggest problem with asylum seekers’ claims is that it takes a long time for the Home Office to process them, that’s the problem, it’s been there for years.

A view of Napier Barracks in Folkestone, Kent, where migrants who have crossed the Channel in small boats are being housed
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“Get your house in order, get that sorted out instead of lurching from one ridiculous proposition to another.”

Sir Keir acknowledged that “there is of course an issue with people trying to get to the United Kingdom, but people are fleeing often from persecution”.

Calling for international co-operation he added: “We should be talking to France about how we handle this, not coming up with ever more ridiculous suggestions that have been floating round in the last couple of days.”

Mr Rycroft told the Public Accounts Committee on Thursday that "everything is on the table" when it comes to the Government's management of processing asylum seekers.

He repeatedly refused to confirm if Ascension Island was being considered as a "serious suggestion" and refused to answer direct questions on whether disused ferries could be turned into processing centres.

Home Office Permanent Secretary Matthew Rycroft answering questions via videolink to the Public Accounts Select Committee
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When committee chairman Meg Hillier asked Mr Rycroft: “Was this really a serious suggestion?”, he replied: “The civil service is here to give ministers impartial, fearless, honest, expert, independent advice and that is what we do. And the system works when we do that in private.”

Pressing Mr Rycroft further, Ms Hillier said the idea was “in the realms of cloud cuckoo land”, asking the permanent secretary once more to confirm if time was spent “investigating something where you couldn’t even land aircraft”.

He replied: “What I can confirm is that the civil service has been responding to ministers’ questions about how other countries deal with what is a global issue – migration.

“We have been leaving no stone unturned in doing that. We’ve been looking at what a whole host of other countries do in order to bring innovation into our own system. No decisions have been taken.

“No final proposals have been put to ministers or to anyone else.

Priti Patel has vowed to stop migrants making the journey across the Channel
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“This is in the realm of the brainstorming stage of a future policy and, I think as ministers have said in the House, everything is on the table, and so it should be at this stage of the policy-making process.”

Labour MP Ms Hillier then asked Mr Rycroft if any further offshore proposals had been discussed, adding: “In your professional opinion, Mr Rycroft, is putting people on old ferries offshore an improvement to our asylum accommodation system?”

He responded that “no decision has been taken”, while adding that the department was considering its options and responding to ministers’ requests to do so.

According to The Times, Number 10 is considering buying retired ferries and converting the vessels into processing centres to house asylum seekers off the UK coast.

A group of people thought to be migrants on the coastline by the White Cliffs of Dover, Kent, after crossing the English Channel by small boat
PA

The newspaper also reported the Home Office discussed moving migrants to decommissioned oil platforms in the North Sea for processing, but the idea was rejected.

In a version of the Australian “offshore” model, asylum seekers could also be sent to detention centres in Papua New Guinea, Moldova, or Morocco, The Guardian said.

It claimed leaked documents had revealed Downing Street had asked officials to look into the matter, but was met with “pushback” from the Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office.

It comes amid controversy over a proposal discussed in the Home Office that asylum seekers could be processed on British overseas territory Ascension Island.

The idea reportedly being considered within Priti Patel’s department was dismissed on Wednesday as an unfeasible, “logistical nightmare” by a member of the Ascension Island Council, Alan Nicholls.

Ms Patel has vowed to stop migrants making the perilous journey across the English Channel in small boats amid record numbers of crossings.

The proposal further reflects the influence of Australia – which has controversially used offshore processing and detention centres for asylum seekers since the 1980s – on the UK’s immigration and asylum policy.

Additional reporting by PA Media.

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