Monday 16 December 2013

Catholic Church criticises Britain’s immigration policy on spouses from outside EU

                               

Only high earning Britons can bring their spouses from non EU countries.
The head of the Roman Catholic Church in England, Vincent Nichols, on Monday criticised Britain’s immigration restrictions on bringing in spouses from outside the EU.
Mr. Nichols, who is the Archbishop of Westminster, also warned against “demonising” migrants going to the country.
He said that a rule introduced in July 2010 that sets an earnings threshold for Britons who want to bring a non-EU spouse to live in the country was also damaging the development of thousands of British children.
Anti-immigration feeling has been fuelled by warnings in right-leaning media about new arrivals claiming state handouts and free healthcare and the issue is set to be a key battleground of the 2015 election.
“Demonising immigrants, who often contribute hugely to our society and well-being, is a dangerous path to follow,’’ Mr. Nichols wrote in Monday’s Guardian newspaper.
“There is something deeply unsavoury about the inhumanity with which immigration targets are being pursued.’’

Under the rule on spouses, only British citizens who earn at least 18,600 pounds (about N4.7 million) a year can sponsor their non-European’s partner’s visa, a threshold which was about one-third higher than the annual minimum wage.
The Home Office explained that the rule was designed to prevent families establishing themselves in the U.K. at the taxpayer’s expense.
Mr. Nichols said the policy was splitting up families and damaging the lives of the British children affected, leaving the people involved “traumatised”.
Prime Minister David Cameron has made immigration policy an important part of his government in the face of the perceived threat that the U.K. Independence Party (UKIP) was siphoning off support ahead of the 2015 general election.
UKIP, which campaigns for Britain to leave the EU and for a halt to “open door” immigration, made sweeping gains in local elections in May, winning almost one in four votes, mostly at the expense of Cameron’s Conservatives.
Cameron said last month he plans to limit EU migrants’ access to welfare in Britain, a theme echoed by Home Secretary Theresa May on Monday.
“There is a growing concern not just here in the UK but elsewhere too about the abuse of free movement, about the way in which people can move freely across Europe sometimes for access to benefits,” Ms. May told the BBC.
“We here in the U.K. are tightening up in terms of our rules in terms of access to benefits.’’

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