clear

Creating new perspectives since 2009

UK statistics body says Sunak asylum backlog statement could affect public trust

January 18, 2024 at 3:51 pm

British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak leaves the Prime Minister’s Office to attend the weekly Prime Minister’s Questions (PMQs) in London, United Kingdom on 13 December, 2023 [Raşid Necati Aslım – Anadolu Agency]

The UK Statistics Authority has criticised Prime Minister Rishi Sunak’s statement that his government had cleared a legacy backlog of asylum decisions by the end of 2023, Reuters has reported. The authority said that this might affect “public trust” as some cases were still unresolved.

Sunak has made “stopping the boats” one of his top five priorities and is seeking to revive a plan to send asylum seekers who arrive in Britain on small boats to Rwanda, after the proposal was blocked by the courts.

The government said earlier this month that it had met a pledge made by Sunak to clear by the end of 2023 a so-called legacy backlog of 92,000 asylum claims which were made before a June 2022 change in immigration law.

However, the opposition Labour Party disputed the government’s statement, citing official statistics which show that 4,537 of those asylum applicants were still awaiting an initial decision over their application as of 28 December.

The government said these were complex cases that required extra work, but Robert Chote, chair of the UK Statistics Authority, said that the government had never previously argued that such cases should be excluded when calculating the backlog.

“It is not surprising that the government’s claim has been greeted with scepticism and that some people may feel misled when these ‘hard cases’ remain in the official estimates of the legacy backlog,” Chote said in a letter to opposition lawmakers. “This episode may affect public trust when the government sets targets and announces whether they have been met.”

Chote also criticised the government for not supplying journalists with the data behind the statement when it first said it had eliminated the backlog. “This does not support our expectations around intelligent transparency, and we have raised this with the Home Office,” he added.

The Home Office is Britain’s interior ministry. An official spokesperson said that it has noted Chote’s letter and is fully committed to transparency.

READ: UK Premier urges House of Lords to pass Rwanda asylum bill