UN
warns of damage to “the fabric of British society” as the state
turns on its people
TLE,
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.
Migrants
pile into dinghies to cross Channel to Dover as 'panic setting in'
before Brexit deadline hits
16
November, 2018
Seven
men are huddled, cold and wet, in a car park at Samphire Hoe near
Dover talking to a Coastguard Search and Rescue officer. Four have
turquoise blankets wrapped tightly around their shoulders by the time
an ambulance arrives on Friday lunchtime to check if they have any
injuries or hypothermia.
On
the rocks of a beach below, a dinghy with a small engine is
deflating. Two lifejackets and a red fuel tank float limply inside
it. A black glove and coat have been abandoned nearby on the pebble
beach, which is overlooked by Dover’s white cliffs.
The
men are Iranian, and have travelled overnight in their inflatable
craft through thick fog across the English Channel, the latest
migrants to arrive during an unprecedented week which has seen 55
caught by border patrol, in what is thought to be a rush ahead of the
March Brexit deadline.
Most
travelled by boat across the Dover Strait, mainly from Iran and
including a four-year-old boy, with seven of the suspected migrants
discovered on a lorry from France.
The
Coastguard responded to six separate incidents in three days in a
surge of crossings that has never been seen before. New smuggling
networks into the UK run by criminal gangs and the impending arrival
of winter, as well as the Brexit deadline which it is assumed will
harden the border, are all thought to be reasons for the increase.
“It
is always surprising to see people come those distances across the
sea in a little boat like that,” says a Coastguard officer who is
on the beach near the abandoned dinghy. “It is not meant to be a
seafaring boat."
He
adds: "Even with my experience, I wouldn’t attempt to cross in
a boat like that. But it’s been happening a fair amount recently.”
The
sea is calm, but the air is heavy with fog; conditions that most
would call treacherous. An RNLI lifeboat and Border Force rib
circling just off the shore are barely visible.
The
fog, which descended on to the cliffs of Dover and shores of France
on Thursday evening, offered the migrants cover, but also made them
invisible to the passing ferries that transport millions of people
per year.
“The
fog and darkness mean the French won’t have seen them,” says
another Coastguard officer at the scene. “They’ll have travelled
through the night for up to seven hours."
Andy
Roberts, a retired Coastguard officer who has worked in the area for
30 years, says it is only a matter of time before someone dies.
“A
tragedy will happen, it’s inevitable,” he says. “They have been
very lucky so far."
There
have been no known casualties in British waters to date, but a body
was discovered off the coast of Boulogne last week.
“The
Dover Strait is the busiest shipping thoroughfare in the world, with
over 400 commercial traffic movements a day,” says Roberts.
“There’s always the risk of being run over and with today’s
thick fog they would easily be lost.”
He
adds: “In the last few weeks 90 per cent of the people who have
been rescued have been young, fit men. If it was children and the
elderly they would already be dead.”
The
rise in the number of people attempting to reach the UK by boat has
worried local fishermen, who say they must now watch for precarious
dinghies, as well as obstacles such as driftwood.
Fisherman
Matt Coker, 38, rescued four Iranian migrants, including one woman,
from the choppy waters between England and France back in June. He
was fishing for cod, pollock and bass with a dozen crew when he
spotted what he thought was a gill net.
“As
we got closer I could see it wasn’t actually the flag of a gill
net, but people holding up oars, waving them and frantically
panicking,” he says. “They had been drifting for a few days in a
three-man, blow-up pleasure dinghy.”
After
bringing them on board, Coker told the migrants to remove their
clothes and dry them in the sun. The woman was being sick and one of
the men was coughing up blood.
“I
felt sorry for them,” Coker recalls. “I gave them some First Aid,
a couple of cups of tea and some fresh water.” He phoned the
Coastguard who met them at the port with officials from Border Force.
Coker
was reminded of the rescue last week as he watched a lifeboat tow a
“tiny” French fishing boat, no more than six metres long, into
port. Ten Iranian men clambered off it and into the custody of Border
Force agents. Their first sight of the UK was a marina that normally
houses fishing boats and personal yachts, with names such as “Wine
Time”. This week, it is home to two Border Force ribs and a stolen
French fishing trawler.
“The
boat was really listing over and low down in the water, to the point
that it actually looked like it was sinking,” says Coker. “There
isn’t enough Border Force support. I’ve seen them a lot more than
ever before but they’re overstretched.”
Echoing
Lieutenant Ingrid Parrot, spokeswoman for the French Maritime
Prefecture, Coker says he is worried things could get worse in the
months before the UK leaves the EU.
"It
has stepped up massively since the Brexit vote," he says. "The
closer we get to March, the more people are starting to panic."
Roberts
agrees that there should be 24-hour presence of Border Force agents
in the sea around Dover. “This is the shortest crossing from France
to the UK and it shouldn’t be a case of ‘we haven’t got enough
cover’,” he says. “We have a minimal number of official boats
compared with the French.”
On
Tuesday, a stolen French fishing trawler entered Dover Harbour with
17 migrants on board. “When you have a trawler that size coming
into Dover port without being stopped it’s a security lapse,"
says Roberts .
The
Coastguard was alerted to the arrival of the seven migrants on a
dinghy shortly before noon on Friday when a member of the public
walking along Samphire Hoe pebble beach saw three lifejackets
floating in the water.
Following
initial fears that a helicopter and two rescue boats would need to be
dispatched to rescue people from the water, officers discovered that
all seven men had safely clambered ashore. Four were wet from the
crossing and two were carrying large rucksacks.
Less
than two hours after they arrived in the UK, the seven men are led
into a Care and Custody immigration van and taken to Dover to be
processed. They leave behind them a deflated dinghy, the fog-shrouded
English Channel, and a path others will soon follow.
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