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Asylum Applications Falling

posted: 27/11/2009

Refugee week street eventThe latest asylum figures show a further fall in the number of fresh claims for refugee status between July and September this year, to 5,055 – a decline of 24%, compared with the same period in 2008.
 

Refugee welfare groups said the fall in asylum numbers raised fears that the tightening up of Britain's borders was denying sanctuary to those who needed protection. The top three countries from where asylum seekers came were Afghanistan (790), Iran (540) and Zimbabwe (525).
 

Immigration detention for asylum and children
A total of 7,110 people were held in immigration detention between July and September this year – more than half of them asylum seekers. They included 315 children, 240 of them under 11. Of those detained, 365 had been held for more than 12 months.
 

More leaving
Net migration – the number of people who come to live in Britain minus the number who move abroad – fell by more than a third to 163,000 last year, its lowest level since Poland joined the European Union.
 

The Office for National Statistics said the fall from 233,000 in 2007 was mainly driven by a rise in emigration to a 17-year high: 427,000 people left Britain to live abroad, up from 341,000 the previous year. The increase was mainly due to the number of Poles returning home.
 

Immigration reached 590,000, with the largest single group comprising 85,000 British citizens returning to live in the UK. That total compares with 574,000 in 2007 and 596,000 in 2006.
 

The level of emigration is the highest since 1991, the first year with comparable records. The ONS said there had been a large increase in the number of people emigrating for work-related reasons, particularly those with a fixed job to go to. The number going to a definite job rose from 100,000 in 2007 to 136,000.
 

Source
 

image              Refugee Week was in mid June.


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