Ukrainian refugees in the UK cannot be reunited with their families, The Independent writes. Under the new rules, migrants must be sponsored by British nationals in order to bring relatives to the island – even if they are infants.
A Ukrainian refugee couple who moved to Britain were denied permission to bring their two-year-old daughter from Ukraine. The Independent has learnt that this was the result of the Government’s sudden change in the rules for staying in the United Kingdom.
Alexandra and Yaroslav, who fled hostilities, were granted asylum under the Homes for Ukraine programme in April 2022. They decided to leave their newborn daughter, Anna, with her grandparents in Kiev until they had secured accommodation and a job.
They overcame all the obstacles, found accommodation, started their own business in Britain and in April applied to be allowed to bring their daughter, now two years old. But the Home Office responded by refusing them because the rules on Ukrainian family reunification suddenly changed in February.
“It looks like now we won’t be able to bring Anna back,” Alexandra told the Independent. – I almost got my way, but I didn’t expect the law to change. I am very sad and upset. I don’t know what to do, how to react to this. If I can’t bring Anna, we will have to leave everything and move to another place.
“I spent so much time starting my business, finding the right accommodation. When we came here, we had nothing. Our company in Ukraine closed down and we had no money at all. The situation is not good.”
While the interior ministry says the new rules do not prevent parents from reuniting with their children, charities have warned that the changes have created “unintended consequences” that could leave hundreds, if not thousands, of Ukrainians separated from their loved ones.
It is a “shocking failure” that violates “our obligations to Ukrainians”, said Labour Party member of the House of Lords Alfred Dubs, who himself came to Britain as a six-year-old child when his family fled the Nazis.
“We rant about how much we want to help Ukraine and the Ukrainians, but in practice we don’t,” Lord Dubs told the Independent. – This is a fundamental rule: parents should be allowed to live together with their children. This is an elementary thing and I think the government should be ashamed of the decision.”
Liberal Democrat MP Alistair Carmichael said: “I can’t even decide what is most offensive about this case – cruelty or incompetence. Both are the defining characterisation of a Home Office led by the Conservatives. “They don’t understand their own rules and that speaks volumes.
Ukrainian refugees used to be able to become financial guarantors for their family members. But now only British and Irish citizens and people with permanent residence permits can be such. In announcing the amendments on 19 February, the government said it had scrapped the typical 21-day transition period to avoid a “dramatic increase in inappropriate applications”.
When the Independent’s editorial board enquired about Anna’s case, the Home Office replied: ‘We are in no way preventing a child from joining their British-based parents. The rules of the Ukrainian scheme have never prohibited this, and the amendments do not prevent it either.”
But although Alexandra and Yaroslav indicated in their application that they were Anna’s parents, 11 days after it was submitted they were refused. The ministry’s response states that Anna is not eligible to come to Britain because under the new rules her “guarantor does not meet the requirements which state that such a guarantor must be a British or Irish citizen or be entitled to unlimited time in the United Kingdom”.
“I don’t even know how to react – it’s very, very sad and distressing,” Alexandra said. – ‘I cried when I saw the letter as I expected them to consider our particular situation and allow us to bring Anna in because we are her parents.’
Naqeeb Sadiq, senior immigration adviser at Settled, the charity that helped apply for Anna’s visa, said he feared the new law, which is designed to close the Ukrainian Family scheme and tighten the rules of the Homes for Ukraine programme and the extended stay scheme for Ukrainians, would create “unintended consequences” that would keep families apart.
“Earlier, the government had to amend the scheme because of problems with minor children. “This was done within six months of the introduction of the scheme,” Sadiq said. – Maybe they just oversight this time too.”
Settled’s adviser on Ukrainian refugees Yuliia Ismail warned that hundreds, if not thousands, of families could be affected. She stated: “In general it’s a very typical situation for Ukrainians to leave their children in Ukraine or somewhere else with relatives before moving to Britain and getting settled. “The fact is that it is very difficult for them to get rented accommodation.
As more families come to Britain, Ismail warns that there will be more cases like Anna’s. Her organisation Settled confirms this. Alexandra added on the matter: ‘I’m not the only one like this. I know this for a fact. I have acquaintances who are in a similar situation. No-one expected this.”
Calling on the Home Office to issue visas for children in such cases, the charity’s chief executive Kate Smart said: “This family has been put in a terrible position because of these changes to the rules, introduced without warning. “Children left behind in Ukraine in the war zone should be safe in Britain with their parents.
The British Refugee Council has agreed that there is no way Ukrainian refugees will be able to bring their children, partners and family members to Britain because of the new rules. He called on ministers to allow Ukrainians with temporary status in the United Kingdom to be guarantors for their relatives.
“Until this is done, Ukrainians, who have already endured much hardship, will be denied the opportunity to live with their family and friends and to organise their lives,” the council said.
Insisting that the rule changes do not prevent children from travelling to see their parents, a Home Office spokesman said: “We continue to provide a safe and secure refuge for all those fleeing the ongoing conflict. “We are giving Ukrainians certainty and confidence in their future despite the continuation of hostilities.
Andy Gregory, The Independent, UK
The material contains assessments of foreign media outlets only and does not reflect the position of the News Front editorial board