UN
warns of damage to “the fabric of British society” as the state
turns on its people
16
November, 2018
Drastic
cuts to social support and welfare risk damaging the very fabric of
British society, a UN
report has
today revealed.
Concluding
his 12-day visit to the country the UN Special Rapporteur on extreme
poverty and human rights, Philip Alston, said the UK Government’s
policies are entrenching high levels of poverty and inflicting
unnecessary misery in one of the richest countries in the world.
Yet
amid the country’s impending exit from the European Union the
government appears to be treating it as an afterthought, with
speculation that the callous policies could be driven by a political
desire for social re-engineering aired.
Alston
concluded that the benefits system, epitomised by Universal Credit,
is driven by the desire to get across a simple set of messages that
the state “no longer has your back” and that “you are on your
own”.
He
said: “What goes along with that is a sense that we should make the
system as unwelcoming as possible.
“That
people who need benefits should be reminded constantly that they are
lucky to get anything.
“That
nothing will be made easy” and “that sanctions should be harsh,
should be immediate and should be painful”.
©
Bassam Khawaja 2018
Some
14 million people, a fifth of the population, currently live in
poverty in the United Kingdom. Four million of these are more than 50
percent below the poverty line, and 1.5 million are destitute, unable
to afford basics essentials.
After
years of progress, poverty is rising again, the UN report found, with
child poverty predicted to rise 7 per cent between 2015 and 2022,
homelessness is up 60 per cent since 2010, and food banks rapidly
multiplying.
“In
the fifth richest country in the world, this is not just a disgrace,
but a social calamity and an economic disaster, all rolled into one,”
Alston said.
Stuck
in an ideological trap
Although
austerity has been used by the government to justify cuts to welfare
and social services, the truth is “there haven’t been many
savings”, Alston says.
Instead
the motivation is very clearly an ideological one.
Universal
Credit was likened to the mentality of a sergeant major in the
report, taking a command and control approach to welfare that sees
harsh, immediate and painful sanctions.
©
Bassam Khawaja 2018
The
sudden “ton of bricks approach” pours hardship on people who are
already under immense pressure, and is “utterly inconsistent with
the essential underpinnings of human rights and the British sense of
community and the values of justice and fairness”, Alston noted.
He
added that many of the “unnecessary and harsh” characteristics of
the government’s flagship welfare programme could be changed
quickly, such as the five week waiting period, payments to a single
household, the digital by default system and the tough consequences
of sanctions.
The
dismantling of the broader social safety net
But
Universal Credit is just the tip of the iceberg. Citing “draconian”
benefit reductions across the board, Alston said while welfare is
being cut on a number of levels, “one of the things I feel most
strongly about is the cuts in local authority budgets”.
“Britain
has a culture of local concern of people been able to get some sort
of assistance from their local councils when things go really wrong,”
he said, but up against 49.9 per cent cuts to their budgets many
councils have been reduced to just the emergency services.
©
Bassam Khawaja 2018
Sports
centres, recreation centres, public lands, libraries and youth
centres are all being lost at the hands of government cuts, which
leaves nowhere for those in the lower income groups to go.
While
those at the top may celebrate tax cuts and an increase in their
income, “they will find themselves living in an increasingly
hostile society because the community groups are being systematically
broken”, Aston notes.
“If
a new minister was interest, if a new government was interested, the
worst aspects of a lot of these policies could be changed overnight,
and for very little money”, he concluded.
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