My Lords, I follow all the previous speakers, including that consummate professional, the noble Lord, Lord Kerr of Kinlochard. I have some similar questions for the Minister. I will try to edit as I go so as not to be too repetitive.
I started by wondering whether the Home Office could possibly be in a position to bring forward and implement these instruments. The GOV.UK website shows the Home Office as still seeking to recruit members to the Age Estimation Science Advisory Committee: a behavioural scientist with expertise in interview techniques and someone with expertise in children’s social services. Is that recruitment still going on? The website shows the closing date as having been December 2022. These areas of expertise are surely crucial.
In this contentious area, does bringing forward instruments fall within the “doing everything it takes” message? How far have the Government got in preparing for these biological techniques? A few days before
Prorogation, I asked a Written Question about the estimated cost of using X-rays, MRI and any other scientific methods provided by the legislation. The Written Answer, which I was told was a holding answer—because we were of course running out of Session—was:
“The Home Office does not yet hold this information. Work is ongoing to determine the level and type of capacity required to support the imaging service”.
Then on 24 November, a few days ago, I received what was described as “a full response”. I was surprised that it was followed up by letter but here it is. I will not repeat the two sentences I have just quoted, because they are exactly the same. The letter goes on:
“It is anticipated that the service will then”—
that is, after the ongoing work—
“be subject to a competitive procurement process, which will provide final clarity on costs”.
No wonder there is no impact assessment giving costs.
On Report on the Illegal Migration Bill, the noble Lord, Lord Murray, as my noble friend said, talked about the regulation-making power not being exercised
“until the Secretary of State is satisfied that the science and analysis are sufficient to support providing for an automatic assumption of adulthood”.
He also said that the Government will
“continue to seek scientific advice”
to ensure the regulations
“are based on a firm evidential basis”.—[Official Report, 5/7/23; col. 1239.]
Can the Minister say whether the chief scientific adviser to the Home Office and AESAC have provided that basis? One must assume that the Secretary of State—either the Secretary of State in office when the SIs were published or the current one—was appropriately satisfied.
The interim committee in October 2022, which is where the website took me, dealt with proposing an age range and assessing whether the claimed age was possible. I am repeating what my noble friend has said because it is a really important point. The committee also recommended that
“no automatic assumptions or consequences should result from refusal to consent”
to procedures—if that is the right term, because it is certainly not “treatment”. Then, of course, legislation we passed through Parliament allowed for both.
During the passage of the same Bill, the noble Lord, Lord Murray, said, in response to my noble friend Lord Paddick, that refusal to consent can be treated in a variety of ways,
“which will be described in the regulations”.—[Official Report, 12/6/23; col. 1817.]
Where can we find those ways? They are not in the version of the regulations I have been reading. He also said that it is
“crucial that we disincentivise adults from knowingly misrepresenting themselves as children”.—[Official Report, 12/6/23; col. 1812.]
I note the word “disincentivise”; we have heard a lot about deterring immigrants. However, he then said:
“I certainly would not compel any child to participate in age assessment”.—[ Official Report, 12/6/23; col. 1815.]
The problem is that the consequences of refusal are very close to compulsion.
During the passage of the then Nationality and Borders Bill, some of us had a very helpful briefing on age assessment arranged by the Home Office and chaired by the noble Baroness, Lady Black of Strome, who was then, as she described herself, the interim chair of the interim committee. We were given assurances that all information would be triangulated, so I ask for an assurance that the introduction of these techniques does not give them any particular status compared with—to quote an email from the Home Office I received following the briefing—
“views from a psychologist, or any other person with a role in the age-disputed person’s life”.
That speaks for itself.
During the passage of the two Bills the House discussed—not always at a user-friendly hour—the issue of consent linked with capacity and ethical considerations. By definition, the techniques do not benefit the child so it will be interesting to hear how they can be ethical. The House also discussed the culture, background and ethnicity of the young people seeking asylum in the UK who may be subjected to these techniques. I was glad to see that the interim committee report made it clear that socioeconomic factors and ethnicity affect the timing of development.
Home Office guidance acknowledges that
“physical appearance is a notoriously unreliable basis for assessment of chronological age” .
The committee report said that “any methodology should” minimise
“any health risk, whether physical or psychological”,
and that there are many reasons
“not to give consent for biological age assessment … not linked to concealment”.
Is the Home Office guidance being changed to fit the current policy? I doubt that many adults, were they in the same situation, could give informed consent. They could well be too traumatised to do so. We should also be aware that a good many asylum seekers come from countries where “medical procedures” are an instrument of torture.
The Secondary Legislation Scrutiny Committee report, of course in restrained language, was pretty damning. It pointed to the absence of the impact assessment, which has been referred to. The Explanatory Note to the instrument says that
“no, or no significant, impact on the private, voluntary or public sector is foreseen”
as the reason for not producing an assessment. Surely impacts are foreseen; they must be foreseen, including impacts on resources, with staffing and equipment diverted from the NHS for one. If the Minister cannot give a cost or range per person examined, can he give a unit cost for each application of each technique? Can he help the House on whether the health staff are available and whether they are willing to implement these techniques?
The scrutiny committee said that it is “vital”—not a term I can recall seeing before in such a report—
“that the Government closely monitor and review the policy and adapt it as necessary”.
The committee is quite right in saying that
“The House may wish to question the Minister”
on monitoring and evaluation. We do. When can we expect this and what can we expect by way of keeping Parliament updated?
The committee badges the regulations as “politically or legally important”. They are politically and legally contentious too. The techniques are “fraught with difficulty”, to use the words of the Advocate-General for Scotland during debate on the first of the two Bills. The difficulties are not solved by these regulations, which is why we cannot support them.