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Wednesday, 23 October, 2002, 15:56 GMT 16:56 UK
Human rights alarm on asylum plans
Asylum seekers
"White list" applicants would normally be sent home
Plans for a "white list" of safe countries to be used to reject asylum claims have been branded "unacceptable" by Parliament's human rights watchdog.

MPs and peers on the joint committee on human rights said presuming countries were safe threatened to put human rights at risk.


We consider that a presumption of safety would present a serious risk that human rights would be inadequately protected

Human Rights Committee
Home Secretary David Blunkett has proposed that the 10 countries trying to join the European Union in 2004 should be on the list.

Peers will vote on the plans when the Nationality, Immigration and Asylum Bill continues its report stage in the House of Lords on Thursday.

The "white list" idea was one of a number of changes to the bill introduced as it entered its final parliamentary stages.

Discrimination fears

People seeking asylum from countries on the list would be returned home within days if they could not prove it would put them in danger.

"White list" nations
Cyprus
Czech Republic
Estonia
Hungary
Latvia
Lithuania
Malta
Poland
Slovak Republic
Slovenia
In a report published on Wednesday, the human rights committee said there was widespread discrimination in some of the nations on the list, for example against Gypsies in the Czech and Slovak Republics.

"The presumption that a country is safe is of questionable validity," said the report.

The committee pointed to "well-authenticated threats" to human rights in the proposed "white list" countries.

"We consider that a presumption of safety, even if rebuttable, would present a serious risk that human rights would be inadequately protected," it said.

"We consider that the presumption of safety is unacceptable on human rights grounds."

The committee was also concerned that the home secretary could be allowed to put other countries on the list later.

And it warned that other parts of the plans, especially the danger that children could be separated from their families, could break European human rights laws.

 WATCH/LISTEN
 ON THIS STORY
Margaret Gilmore reports
"The number coming from Eastern Europe is up dramatically"
Home secretary David Blunkett
"We'd have to be mad to say come here, have a holiday, and we'll pick up the tab"
Shadow home secretary Oliver Letwin
"By and large this is a package which seems to be moving in the direction of Tory policy"

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17 Sep 02 | Politics
18 Sep 02 | Politics
30 Aug 02 | World at One
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