The Sunday Times - UK (2021-11-28)

(EriveltonMoraes) #1

18


NEWS


A blame game has broken out at the top of
government over the migrant crisis, with
allies of the prime minister openly ques-
tioning Priti Patel’s record and the home
secretary’s friends accusing other minis-
ters of doing “sweet f*** all” to help.
Downing Street officials attacked Patel
for “doing nothing for two years” to pre-
vent the passage of small boats laden with
migrants crossing the Channel.
“She has got to get a grip,” one cabinet
minister said. “She has overpromised
and underdelivered for the past two
years. It’s been all mouth and no trousers
and everyone, including the PM, is get-
ting fed up of her.”
There were even lurid claims that the
prime minister had lost confidence in
Patel, but this was flatly denied by No 10
last night.
Another cabinet minister accused the
home secretary of going “missing in
action” and said she had been ducking
requests to do broadcast interviews after
27 people drowned last week as they
attempted to cross the Channel.
Senior Home Office sources last night
suggested the death toll could still rise
with more bodies likely to be pulled from
the freezing water in the coming days.
Patel’s allies hit back at the claims and
described the briefings against her as
“pathetic”. A source close to the home
secretary said: “She has said for the past
two years there is no quick solution. I
would actually ask those briefing, partic-
ularly those in No 10, what is it that she
has not delivered?”
The prime minister has been publicly
and privately supportive of Patel, urging
colleagues to “stick with Prit”. But
patience snapped in No 10 as the small
boats saga capped a month of setbacks
for the government. The number of
migrants to have reached the UK by boat
this year is now approaching 27,000 —
three times last year’s total.

Caroline Wheeler, Tim Shipman
and Dipesh Gadher

18


MIGRANT CRISIS


SUNDAY TIMES PHOTOGRAPHER JACK HILL

“You save it today and in
the morning it’s worth just
50,000. It doesn’t make
sense. You can’t plan. That’s
why we try to make it out.”
At present 100,000 tomans is
worth about £2.50.
His second cousin had
drowned, along with his wife
and three children, trying to
cross the Channel to the UK
last year. But Ebrahimi said
he would still try to go.
Afghanistan, of course, is
different. Thousands have
fled since the Taliban
takeover this autumn.
The country’s new rulers
have persecuted minorities
and restricted girls’ access to
education.
In Syria, a decade-long civil
war has ground to a hopeless
stalemate. The intense urban
bombing campaigns, like the
one that destroyed much of
Aleppo, might have slowed,
but when the air-raid sirens
stop, there is still insecurity,
poverty and hopelessness to
contend with.
“If I had the money for it
I’d leave tomorrow in any
way,” said Arav Mohammed,
Dana’s brother.
“I believe if you came from
the UK and experienced
living here like a local, you’d
hate it and try to leave, too.”

parts of the world. But if they
want to return, they can
always return here.”
Yet, like people around the
world, young Kurds in Iraq
have mobile phones that
allow them to access the
internet and see how people
in other countries live. They
can see that life is better
elsewhere.
Kurds from Iran also make
up a large proportion of those
crossing the Channel. They
face different challenges,
living in a country where
ordinary people have been
pummelled by American-led
sanctions and the corruption
of their nation’s leaders.
The Iranian regime, which
fears Kurdish militancy,
ruthlessly represses Kurdish
areas in particular, depriving
them of development and
infrastructure and
persecuting anyone who
speaks out against them. The
sanctions and repression lead
to wild depreciations in the
currency.
“It doesn’t matter how
much you work, you work so
hard for months and you put
aside 100,000 tomans,”
Selam Ebrahimi, a Kurd from
the impoverished town of
Sardasht, told me over the
summer.

graduate told me, does not
mean that you do not want to
live.
In the Kurdistan Regional
Government (KRG) area,
rights groups say that there is
no free local press and little
freedom of expression.
In Sulaymaniyah, an
eastern city, thousands took
to the streets last week to
protest against what they say
is rampant corruption. They
were met with violence from
the authorities.
Unemployment is
endemic. Many poor families
survive on remittances sent
home by relatives in Europe.
One cousin with a steady job
in Birmingham can keep
many heads above the water.
Last week Masrour
Barzani, the multibillionaire
prime minister of the KRG,
dismissed the claim that his
people were desperate to
leave.
“Many want to go to
Europe in search of a
different opportunity,”
Barzani said.
“It’s not a flight of
desperation. I hope the world
knows that these people went
there like every other
immigrant wants to travel
and go in search of different
opportunities in different

LOOKING FOR A BETTER LIFE


IRAQ

SYRIA

TURKEY

SAUDI ARABIA

IRAN

Kurdistan
Autonomous
Region

The official
unemployment rate
in 2018 was 9 per
cent. Today the
number may be
much higher

Mosul Erbil

Kirkuk

100 miles

Semi-autonomous
region in northern Iraq
with a population of over

5m


Kurds form between

15-20%
of the population
of Iraq

The official
minimum wage
is around

£
a month

Thousands
have left Iraqi
Kurdistan this
year for a new
life abroad

80%
of the
population
can read
and write

Around

5.5%
of the population
lives in poverty

homes. Or we might think of
economic migrants, who
leave their country solely to
find a better job elsewhere.
Often, reality lies
somewhere in the middle,
where need and opportunity
meet.
Repression, corruption
and poverty drive people to
look to Europe for a better
life: a smuggler provides the
service.
“People don’t have an
income here, they have no
opportunities,” said Arav, 27,
who like his brother is
unemployed.
He and Dana finished
secondary school, only to
find that there were no
prospects for them.
“We’re young and can’t
find any opportunities, so we
try to go to a country that
gives us an opportunity to be

independent and take care of
ourselves and make a living,”
he said.
“If we stay here we’ll never
become anything.”
Many of the migrants
trying to cross the Channel,
and those who were trapped
in the forests of Belarus, are
from the Kurdish part of Iraq,
an autonomous enclave in the
north of the country.
Iraqi Kurdistan might look
stable from the outside, with
its oil wealth and skyscrapers
in the centre of Erbil and its
sons and daughters of the
ruling class drinking negronis
and smoking shishas on
rooftops. But many who live
there say they see it as a
prison.
Rights groups say that
corruption in the ruling class
funnels cash through
patronage networks that
benefit their own families.
The rich get richer and the
poor get poorer.
There is no active conflict
in most parts of the region,
and people are not starving to
death. But for those without
connections to the ruling
class, many young people say,
the nepotism means that it is
very difficult to advance in
life. Just because you are not
going to die, as one university

‘If you lived like us in Kurdistan, you might risk it all to reach Britain’


Every summer, in their small
town in the Kurdish region of
Iraq, Dana Mohammed, 20,
and his brother, Arav, would
meet local people who had
left years before and made
the journey to the UK.
They would come back to
Ranya on holiday, wearing
nice clothes, and talk about
how good life was in Britain
compared with home, where
corruption, repression and
poverty make life hard and
work very difficult to find.
For young people with
ambition, the brothers
believed, there was little
prospect of a future there.
When Dana asked a local
smuggler about going to the
UK himself, he was told that it
was easy, so he set off.
It was not easy, it turned
out. But this month he made
it across the Channel on a
small boat.
Now he is in the UK. If he is
granted leave to stay in the
country, he will start to work
and send money back to his
family.
When we think of people
coming to Europe, we might
picture refugees fleeing
bombs raining down on their

Louise Callaghan
Middle East correspondent

If we stay


we’ll never


be anything


Patel came under sustained fire in a
meeting of the Cobra emergency com-
mittee on Wednesday, and a second
meeting of ministers and officials in the
cabinet room on the same afternoon.
Among those questioning her actions
was Dominic Raab, the justice secretary
and deputy prime minister, who has
been charged by Johnson with reforming
human rights legislation to deter asylum
seekers from coming to the UK.
One Downing Street official said: “She
got an absolute pasting in the meetings,
with other ministers questioning her per-
formance in pretty blunt terms. She’s
done absolutely nothing for two years. It
just gets worse. Everyone else is sick of
listening to the excuses.”
Earlier this month, Stephen Barclay,
the Cabinet Office secretary, was tasked
with leading a cross-government review
into how to prevent migrants crossing the
English Channel. Patel’s allies claim this
was an acknowledgment that other
departments had done “sweet f*** all” to
help address the problem.
However, cabinet sources are wither-
ing about Patel’s penchant for explosive
language and lack of delivery.
Others accused Patel of making inflam-
matory public statements that made it
more difficult to get the French gov-
ernment to help. An aide to a cabi-
net minister added: “The prob-
lem with Priti is that her
approach with the French has
tended to make things worse
rather than better. She has
been a diplomatic disaster.”
No 10 insiders say the
small boats problem has,
with the exception of
Covid-19, been the one
that has consumed most
of Johnson’s time over the
past year. “Boris has been
raging about this for
months,” said a Whitehall
official. “He is very frus-
trated that he seems to

Patel’s fury as bitter blame game


The home secretary insists she has


been let down by colleagues, but


cabinet patience is wearing thin


still be having the same discussions about
what to do as he was this time last year.”
Friends of the home secretary
rounded on Ben Wallace, the defence
secretary, who is tipped to succeed her if
she is forced out, as well as Liz Truss, the
foreign secretary, and Raab, Truss’s pre-
decessor in that job. “She’s asked for help
from the MoD to find military sites that
could accommodate asylum seekers to
get them out of hotels but that’s never
materialised,” a friend said.
“Similarly she has asked for help from
the Foreign, Commonwealth and Devel-
opment Office on negotiating returns and
that’s never materialised either. The one
thing they are supposed to do is to speak
to foreigners and foreign countries.”
Patel is frustrated that Border Force
has refused to enact her policy to turn
around the small boats. But other
cabinet ministers believe this is
a plan liable to end up killing
more migrants.
Patel is also angry that
fellow cabinet ministers
have so far blocked a
radical move to “dero-
gate” from, or revoke,
certain articles of the
European Convention

on Human Rights (ECHR) which migrants
are said to be using to exploit the asylum
system. It is understood that this was
raised in Wednesday’s Cobra meeting.
They claim that certain clauses, including
the right to family life or the prohibition
of inhuman and degrading treatment, are
being interpreted too liberally by immi-
gration judges and are routinely allowing
claimants with weak cases to remain in
the UK.
But the proposal, which the home sec-
retary first raised last year, has been
blocked by ministers on the advice of For-
eign Office lawyers. “A year ago, she sat
around the cabinet table in various meet-
ings and was told: ‘No, you can’t do that;
it will be seen as too radical’,” Patel’s
friend said.
“So there’s a reality check for those
people who are now briefing against her
because many of them sat in the room
and completely dismissed all the sugges-
tions and ideas she put forward.”
Countries trying to derogate from the
ECHR normally have to prove that they
are “in a time of war or other public
emergency threatening the life of the
nation”.
The powers were used during the
Troubles in Northern Ireland. In 1978, the
government was allowed to revoke
Article 5 — which guarantees the right to
liberty and security — in order to detain
IRA terrorist suspects without trial.
The home secretary also blames cabi-
net colleagues for blocking efforts to get
asylum applicants processed in
another country.
Lord Ken Macdonald

QC, a former director of public prosecu-
tions, said the migrant crisis — despite
last week’s deaths in the Channel — would
struggle to meet the threshold for deroga-
tion. “Clearly these landings are a serious
problem and need to be dealt with,” he
said. “But to derogate from our interna-
tional responsibilities as she suggests, the
home secretary would have to establish
that we face a crisis of such gravity that
the very life of the nation is threatened.
“I very much doubt she could demon-
strate that by pointing to a few hundred
migrants arriving each day in the UK.”
Macdonald also pointed out that some
elements of the convention, including
Article 3, which prohibits torture and
inhuman or degrading treatment, bestow
intangible rights that cannot be over-
turned, even on a temporary basis.
The prime minister has asked Raab to
look at the ECHR. A source close to John-
son said: “He is bit squeamish about it but
it’s a problem and he’s asked Dom to look
at it.”
Relations between Britain and France
hit a new low last week when Johnson
wrote to President Macron demanding
co-operation over the migrant crisis. He
said that unless the two countries worked
together more migrants would die.
Macron responded by cancelling talks
with Patel this weekend. It is understood
that she now fears that stalemate with
Macron will last until the French election
in April.
Last night the home secretary issued a
further appeal for collaboration. She said
she had had “constructive conversa-
tions” with Gérald Darmanin, the French
interior minister, and revealed that
Home Office officials were in Paris on Fri-
day.
“As I have said time and time again,
there is no quick fix, no silver bullet. The
UK cannot tackle this issue alone, and
across Europe we all need to step up, take
responsibility, and work together in a
time of crisis,” she said.
“Next week I will continue to push for
greater co-operation with European part-
ners because a failure to do so could
result in even worse scenes in the freez-
ing water during the coming winter
months.”
A No 10 source denied the prime min-
ister had lost confidence in the home sec-
retary: “The PM is full square behind
Priti.”

Priti Patel has
asked other
ministers for
help, her friends
say. In the camps
near Dunkirk,
above, people
waited for new
chances to cross
the Channel and
showed photos
of those missing
since the dinghy
disaster on
Wednesday
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