Refugees Ending Up Homeless
New research, published by the Refugee Council and commissioned by The Guardian, reveals high levels of homelessness and destitution among refugees shortly after they have been granted their refugee status.
Refugees who arrive in the UK through formal resettlement schemes, such as the Syrian Vulnerable Persons Resettlement Scheme, have accommodation secured before they arrive and receive 12 months tailored support to help them settle and integrate.
However, refugees who arrive in the UK independent of such a scheme have their support withdrawn within 28 days of being granted refugee status, leaving them at real risk of homelessness and destitution. As government support is quickly cut off after somebody receives refugee status, they can find themselves homeless, forced to rely charities, friend, families and food banks to meet their basic needs.
The Refugee Council conducted a survey of 54 refugees who had been granted status since 2016, and found that:
- Of the 54 respondents to the survey more than half, 31, slept rough or in a hostel or night shelter in the period after they were granted refugee status.
- None of the people who were living in asylum support accommodation had managed to find secure accommodation by the time they were evicted at the end of the move on period.
- Most of these newly recognised refugees were forced to rely on charities, friends and family, and foodbanks once their asylum support payments were terminated as Home Office support dropped away and employment had not been secured. 30 people reported feeling uncomfortable about relying on others for food, money or accommodation, and 12 said they felt unsafe.
- Many respondents reported negative feelings after being granted refugee status, and one reported multiple suicide attempts.
- Participants reported high levels of loneliness and isolation.
The Refugee Council’s Director of Advocacy said: “The findings of this survey add to a growing body of evidence that shows the many newly recognised refugees become homeless and destitute at the point when our government has committed to protect them.”
“Instead of this being a time of relief and happiness for refugees, quite often the opposite is true as they find themselves without anywhere to live and relying on the charity of others to survive. The Government must not turn its back on the very people it has decided need its protection and must urgently review the current system to ensure that refugees are not left unsupported.”
You can download the full report ‘Refugees without refuge: Findings from a survey of newly recognised refugees’ here: http://reliefweb.int/sites/reliefweb.int/files/resources/Refugees_without_refuge_Sept_2017.pdf





