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MPs debate widening refugee family reunion rules following British Red Cross ‘Torn Apart’ campaign

British Red Cross

2 min read Partner content

MPs debate widening refugee family reunion rules following British Red Cross 'Torn Apart' campaign


MPs will today debate widening the UK’s refugee family reunion rules, following calls from the British Red Cross and its Torn Apart campaign. Current UK asylum rules allow people granted refugee status to bring close family members to join them, however this does not include children aged 18 or over.

The debate, secured by Northern Isles MP Alistair Carmichael, will discuss expanding the current rules around the age limit on family reunion. The British Red Cross is calling for family reunion to be expanded to include children up to the age of 25, who were living with their parents when they were forced to leave their home country.

British Red Cross Chief Executive Mike Adamson said: “We are witnessing the biggest refugee crisis since WWII, but our restrictive rules around family reunion mean that young people are torn apart from their families.

“It is vital that safe and legal routes to protection are expanded, which is what family reunion offers. For many, the only way to reunite with their parents may be to place their lives in the hands of dangerous people traffickers.

“Refugee families, who have already been through more pain and trauma than most of us can ever imagine, deserve better than this. Any parent will tell you that you do not stop being a parent to your child when they turn 18.”

The British Red Cross’s Torn Apart campaign is asking people to email their MP to take action on refugee family reunion: www.redcross.org.uk/tornapart.

The campaign has won the backing of parliamentarians across a range of parties including Alastair Carmichael MP, who said:

“The Torn Apart campaign puts a human face to the heart-breaking consequences of Home Office rules keeping families apart. Today I will ask the Immigration Minister to make a few simple changes to the rules to allow families to be reunited as international law and moral obligation demands of us.

“No one is pretending that this is the silver bullet to solve the refugee crisis but that is no reason for not doing it. A small change will make a huge difference to the families currently being forced to live apart.”

The debate will be held at 3.00pm at Westminster Hall and can be watched at parliamentlive.tv.

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