Brexit: £2K Incentives offered to EU citizens to exit the UK

Visas, Immigration & Nationality

Brexit: £2K Incentives offered to EU citizens to exit the UK

EU citizens are being offered financial incentives to leave the UK and return to their country of origin. 

A report claims that EU nationals are being quietly added to a voluntary return scheme with the Home Office offering to cover the cost of flights and hand out £2,000 for resettlement.

The news comes with just over three months to the deadline for EU citizens to apply for UK settled status under the EU Settlement Scheme. Groups supporting vulnerable EU citizens say this move “undermines” the British government’s claim it is encouraging EU citizens to apply for settled status.

Registration deadline

The registration deadline for the EU Settlement Scheme (EUSS) is on 30 June 2021. Benjamin Morgan, who runs the EU homeless rights project at the Public Interest Law Centre, said: “It is clear from our casework that some of the most vulnerable EU citizens are yet to resolve their status. Barriers to application and delays in Home Office decision-making remain significant factors.”

“This mixed messaging around settled status on the one hand and voluntary returns on the other, seriously undermines the government’s claim that the rights of vulnerable Europeans will be protected after Brexit,” Mr Morgan stated.

A spokesperson for the Home Office defended the voluntary returns scheme, saying: “Some people may choose not to obtain status under EUSS and may not wish to remain in the UK after the deadline.”

“That is why we have written to stakeholders to inform them that EEA nationals who wish to leave the UK may now be eligible for support to help them do so under the voluntary returns scheme,” the spokesperson added.

Losing UK immigration status

Joint Council for the Welfare of Immigrants (JCWI) warned that tens, maybe even hundreds, of thousands of EU citizens risk losing their legal right to remain in the UK.

In particular, the JCWI expressed concern over the immigration status of EU care workers and workers in industries with poor conditions, low pay and insecure contracts – including construction and agriculture, among others. The JCWI fears that many EU citizens will slip through the cracks of the EUSS scheme.

Legal policy director at the JCWI, Chai Patel, said: “Our research scares me because the people we talked to were far less vulnerable than other groups hidden in exploitative working conditions, who no one has been able to reach to ask questions.”

“Despite warnings from us and many other experts, the Home Office is burying its head in the sand about this just like they did with Windrush and making excuses instead of finding solutions,” Patel added.

The JCWI is not the only organisation to raise concerns about some EU citizens slipping through the cracks. The Migration Observatory, based at Oxford University, also fears that many EU citizens will miss the 30 June EUSS registration deadline.

However, the future borders and UK immigration minister, Kevin Foster, dismissed the fears saying that an ‘incredibly misleading picture has been painted of the EUSS scheme. Nearly five million people have applied, highlighting the success of the scheme.’

Have you settled your status in the UK? How was the process? Talk to us in the comment section below.

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Charlie

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