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Senior Church leaders write to Peers ahead of House of Lords vote on Nationality & Borders Bill

Asylum and Migration, Church Statements, Welcoming Environment · 25 April, 2022

As the Nationality and Borders Bill returns to the House of Lords this week, several senior Church leaders have written to Peers to encourage them to stand up for changes to the Bill.

On Tuesday 26th April, Peers are due to debate the Bill once again, during the ‘ping-pong’ stage of the Bill, where it is passed between the House of Lords and the House of Commons.

During the passage of the Bill, the House of Lords have repeatedly introduced amendments which seek to alter the Bill’s hostile approach towards asylum seekers and refugees. Despite consistent support for the Bill in the House of Commons, they have continued in their approach to attempt to change the Bill.

Last week, Church leaders wrote to MPs ahead of their vote on the Bill. You can read this here. 

You can read the full letter from Church leaders to Peers below.

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We are writing as a group of Christian leaders, from denominations and traditions across the UK, ahead of the debate on the Nationality and Borders Bill in the House of Lords this week. We want to take this last opportunity to make it clear where we stand on the Bill, and to urge you to support the continued inclusion of amendments previously made to the Bill in the House of Lords. Peers have consistently supported changes to the Bill to bring it in line with international convention, and demonstrate compassion and care for our common humanity. Being resolute about these safeguards is rightly the role of a revising chamber.

Faith groups have been outspoken on our concerns about the Bill. In February, over 1000 faith leaders from communities across the UK joined us to express how horrified and appalled we were about its potential repercussions. We have made it clear how we feel the Bill fails to uphold the principles and values of the UK by creating hostility and fostering discrimination against some of the most vulnerable people in the world. We hope that our vocal concern might encourage you to continue to seek changes even at this very late stage.

Only in the last few weeks we have witnessed the seemingly limitless compassion and commitment shown by UK citizens as they have welcomed Ukrainian refugees into their lives and homes. Yet the Nationality and Borders Bill directly contradicts this generosity of spirit. We find it challenging to understand how the policies within the Bill will work in practice, except that they will cause hardship, criminalise innocent people and fracture families. The government’s recently announced plan to export some asylum seekers to Rwanda only compounds our sense of concern, representing an abandonment of the UK’s responsibilities and a denial of the rights and dignity of refugees.

In particular, we support amendments to the Bill made to expand and protect family reunion rights, to enable asylum seekers to work after waiting six months for their application outcome, to establish a target for resettlement and to amend the two-tier system proposed for asylum seekers. Each of these amendments recognises that the trauma and need of a person seeking asylum should be prioritised, and that we should do all we can to offer opportunities for people and families to restore their lives in a place of safety. In supporting these amendments, we urge you not to vote against the lives of vulnerable children, men, women and families who are in desperate need of our support.

In this Easter season, as Christians we celebrate new life and new hope. Our faith tells us that our God-given hope in new life should influence the way we treat our neighbour, wherever they come from. As the Nationality and Borders Bill comes before you once again this week, we ask you to consider how your vote demonstrates how you care for those most vulnerable in our world.

Recently, Church leaders have been criticised for joining the debate about asylum and immigration plans. But in the face of unfair and cruel proposals, to fail to speak out would be a denial of our gospel calling. The Biblical mandate is that righteous nations ‘welcome the stranger’. So, regardless of the outcome of this week’s votes, we will not stop advocating for love to be shown to our neighbour through the policies and practices in our asylum system. Churches across the UK will continue to come alongside those who remain in desperate need of our friendship and welcome.

We wish to encourage you in your role, and hold you in our prayers during this time.

With regards,

Bishop John Arnold, Roman Catholic Bishop of Salford

Dr Patrick Coyle, Chair, Cytûn – Churches Together in Wales

Revd Clare Downing, General Assembly Moderator of the United Reformed Church

Barbara Easton, Vice-President of the Conference of the Methodist Church in Great Britain

Revd Lynn Green, General Secretary, The Baptist Union of Great Britain

Revd Sonia Hicks, President of the Conference of the Methodist Church in Great Britain

The Most Revd Andrew John, Archbishop of Wales and Bishop of Bangor

Paul Parker, Recording Clerk, Quakers in Britain

Bishop Mike Royal, General Secretary of Churches Together in England

Most Rev Mark Strange, Bishop of Moray, Ross and Caithness, and Primus of the Scottish Episcopal Church

Filed Under: Asylum and Migration, Church Statements, Welcoming Environment

Hannah Brown

I am the Campaigns and Church Engagement Officer for JPIT. My role involves working with the team to ensure that our campaigns are run effectively, and helping to empower local churches to engage with social justice and effective change-making. I have a background in local church partnership and engagement, and enjoy exploring how we communicate for effective change. I am particularly excited to see how JPIT can empower the church to be a voice of hope and transformation, particularly for those marginalised and disempowered by the systems of society.

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