UK Parliament / Open data

Immigration, Asylum and Nationality Bill

My hon. Friend is absolutely right. It would perhaps have been helpful to hear from the Foreign and Commonwealth Office as well, because interdepartmental responsibility is involved. On 25 July, following my letter to the then Minister, Lord Filkin—a Home Office Minister—responded. He said that"““as a result of the enquiries by my officials,””—" that is, Home Office, not DFES, officials—"““it was decided that the institution did not fully meet the requirements of a bona fide institution, hence the reason for the refusal decision.””" We challenged that in the light of the institute’s background and support from the Catholic church, including eminent people such as Cardinal Basil Hume. On 8 August, I wrote to Lord Filkin. I said:"““I feel that the time has come when I have to ask formally that the status of The Institute of St Anselm be investigated and recognised formally in view of the assertion pertained in your letter that ‘The Institute did not fully meet the requirements of a bona fide institution’.””" I had to write to him again on 17 September, saying:"““I would be grateful if you would be kind enough to confirm that this matter is now being dealt with as a matter of urgency . . . and would like your assurance that it has been satisfactorily resolved.””" Throughout this time, students were being turned away and having to appeal on grounds that would be denied under the Bill. On 12 September 2002, Mr. Lawrence from the integrated casework directorate of the immigration and nationality directorate wrote to Louise Cuming at the Institute of St. Anselm, saying:"““I can confirm that from the information submitted, I am happy that the Institute of St Anselm meets the requirements of the Immigration Rules.””" We thought that we were back on track—that the students seeking to apply would have their visas granted and there would be no need for them to appeal—but, no. That is what the IND said in September, but on 1 October Lord Filkin wrote to me to say that"““further enquiries are already being made by the Immigration Service to establish whether or not St Anselm is now deemed to meet the necessary requirements to qualify as ‘bona fide’.””" Although one part of the immigration service believed that the institute was bona fide, Lord Filkin was pursuing further inquiries. On 7 October 2002, Lord Filkin wrote to me to say:"““You will be pleased to hear that those investigations are now complete and my officials are now satisfied that all of the requirements of the Rules have been met.""I understand that a letter to this effect was sent to Louise Cuming on 12 September and I am enclosing a copy””." That was despite his having written to me on 1 October to say that inquiries were still going on, at the same time as students were still being turned down and required to go to appeal. Those appeals would be denied under the Bill. That is why amendment No. 3 is so important. Following Lord Filkin’s letter, the director of the Institute of St. Anselm wrote to me to say:"““However it has to be said that this information had clearly not penetrated Heathrow Airport three weeks later, where three of our students were held for between six and twelve hours while our status was clarified . . . It is therefore disappointing to see that the same information . . . does not appear to have reached Lord Filkin.””" We can begin to see a pattern emerging. Perhaps the Minister will begin to understand why I have very little confidence in the ability of the system—part of which may be the responsibility of the DFES and the FCO, and a significant part is certainly that of the Home Office—to ensue that fair decisions are reached. Unless we are absolutely certain that decisions are fair, students who are unfairly treated, or feel unfairly treated, must have some right of appeal. After all that, one would have thought that things would be all right. Geoffrey Filkin had told me that it was a mess and that he was going to sort it out. However, I had to write to him again on 8 November of that year. I said:"““On Sunday the 30th September Jabulani Khumalo, a student intending to commence a course at the Institute of St Anselm arrived at Heathrow Airport at 7am. Mr. Khumalo carried letters of invitation from the Institute, a letter of designation from the Bishop . . . and confirmation that the fees would be paid directly by the Diocese.””" I will not go through the whole sorry incident, but Mr. Khumalo was held for three hours. Investigations were conducted and correspondence was opened, and he was finally escorted to the plane and escorted off it when he arrived back in Johannesburg. Eventually he came back to the United Kingdom. In my letter to Lord Filkin, I went on to say:"““It is . . . plain that the assertion made by Mr. Lawrence to the effect that ‘I have today notified staff and Ports’ is . . . nonsense””." The fact is that the undertakings given by the Home Office throughout this sorry episode have not been worth the paper that they are written on. I appreciate that I am talking about one educational establishment, but I have no reason to suppose that such errors are not being made time and again. Lord Filkin wrote to me on 15 May—we are now in 2003, so this has been going on for more than a year—to say that"““following our previous correspondence, assurances were given both to yourself and the Institute that the establishment now met the requirements of the Immigration Rules and that immigration staff had been advised of this fact. It is most regrettable however that whilst the Institute was informed of this on 12 September 2002, the central computerised records were not amended until early October. It is now apparent that students intending to study at St Anselm’s continued to experience difficulties””." He was so right about that. More time passed, and more students were affected. We are about halfway through the 19 cases now, Mr. Deputy Speaker—they are piling up. On 6 May 2004, a year later, I had to write to the hon. Member for Sunderland, South (Mr. Mullin), who was by then at the Home Office, to say:"““In spite of this and Geoffrey Filkin’s clear undertakings, the message does not appear to have reached Entry Clearance Officers around the world””," and more in the same vein. On 29 June 2004, I wrote again to the Minister to point out"““the failure of successive government ministers to properly resolve this issue in spite of assurances given to me””." On 30 June 2004, there was more of the same. The Minister wrote to me to address the issues, and effectively to apologise, mentioning an ““error””. He wrote:"““As each student application will be checked against this information, I hope that there will be no repeat of mistakes of the past by entry clearance officers about the status of the Institute””." This was two years after the Department had determined that everything was all right. On 1 July 2004, Jessica Mabbutt, the head of the correspondence section at UK Visas, wrote to me:"““The Institute of St Anselm’s correct status as an educational establishment is now available to all Entry Clearance Officers and I hope that the Institute’s status should no longer be cited as a reason for refusal in any application.””" Yet still the cases were coming in. Without the right of appeal that would be made available in the amendments tabled today, these students would have been denied access to the education that they were finally, in most cases, able to enjoy in the United Kingdom. We come, at last, to this year. On 8 February 2005, I wrote to Bharat Joshi, head of section at UK Visas. I want to place on it record that Bharat Joshi is one of the most helpful and sympathetic civil servants that it has ever been my privilege to work with. He is a super guy, and he tries his level best to sort things out. I wrote to him, and he was immensely helpful, but even he could not sort this out. I received a letter from UK Visas on 21 March 2005, which stated:"““Although at the time of Fr Okora’s application the Entry Clearance Officer was satisfied that Fr Okora met the other student criteria, the Institute of St Anselm was not at that time””—" this is 2005—"““on the list of recognised educational establishments.””" This is three years later—[Interruption.] The Minister says from a sedentary position that there was not one. If that is so, why does UK Visas go on to say:"““His application therefore fell to be refused””?" What would Father Okora have done if there had been no right of appeal? I wrote to the Home Secretary, the Minister’s boss, on 30 March this year, to say that I would be grateful if he would look into the matter. The hon. Member for Pontypridd (Dr. Howells) was by then the Minister in charge—we have got through quite a chapter of Ministers in the Department, have we not? Let us bear it in mind that the institute has been recognised, then not recognised and then recognised again. The Minister wrote on 14 April:"““I am satisfied that there was no fault within the Department’s procedures and that the Institute of St Anselm was included on the Register at the earliest opportunity.””" Four years? Are we serious? On 8 July, I wrote to the head of correspondence at UK Visas, Peter Hooper—another extremely helpful civil servant—and told him that"““I was given Ministerial assurances that our Embassies and High Commissions would be notified of the approval of the institute””." On 1 August 2005—we are nearly there, Mr. Deputy Speaker—I received a letter from UK Visas concerning Sister Bernadette Mwita, saying:"““The Entry Clearance Manager in Nairobi reviewed the decision to refuse entry clearance in the light of your representations . . . and decided, given the information enclosed with your letter, to overturn the refusal decision.””" What would Sister Bernadette Mwita have done about her education at the Institute of St. Anselm, had there been no right of appeal? Sister Matilde Adong, Sister Joan Tombe, Sister Anna Patrick, Sister Teresa Hanh, Sister Mary Kim, Yaqub Gill, Jabulani Khumalo, Mary Ebbele, Leopold Kashama, Cajetan Metu, Barthelemy Namdeganaramna, Rita Dube, Lourdes Manrique, Hye Ko, David Okeke, Leo Rozario, Ambroise Bahiya, Bernadette Mwita and Joyce Hoedoafia are all real people whose initial applications to come to this country to study—in many cases as sisters in the Catholic faith—were rejected by entry clearance officers because of the blinding incompetence of the Home Office and its inability to recognise this one institute. I recognise that this is one case, but it involves 19 real people. If this can happen in the case of the Institute of St. Anselm, what might be happening in all the other educational establishments across the country? I am firmly convinced that the Government are making a profound error. In all equity, a right of appeal must be granted to students whose applications to come to this country to study on bona fide educational courses are rejected. I hope, for that reason, Mr. Deputy Speaker, that you will allow my hon. Friend the Member for Chesham and Amersham to move amendment No. 3 and to press it to a vote. I shall most certainly support it.
Type
Proceeding contribution
Reference
439 c998-1002 
Session
2005-06
Chamber / Committee
House of Commons chamber
Back to top