Priti Patel:Resettling Afghans in UK will take time

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The government will work with international partners and other countries to resettle up to 20,000 Afghan refugees in the UK, Home Secretary Priti Patel has said. 

A new scheme will see up to 5,000 Afghans eligible in the first year. 

But Ms Patel told the BBC it will “take time” to set up the scheme and “we cannot deliver this on our own”. 

Women, girls and religious and other minorities, who are at most risk from the Taliban, will be given priority. 

However, opposition parties have criticised the settlement scheme for not going far enough. 

Thousands of Afghans have been trying to flee the country after the militants seized control of the capital Kabul.

The new plan is on top of the existing scheme for interpreters and other staff who have worked for the UK.

Some 5,000 Afghans and family members are expected to benefit from that policy.

Appearing on BBC Breakfast, Ms Patel refused to give a timescale for how long it would take for the 20,000 Afghans to be brought to the UK. 

However, she compared the new scheme to one introduced for Syrian refugees, which saw a similar number of people resettled over a period of seven years. 

“We could end up bringing many more [than 20,000] but first of all we have to have the underpinning and the infrastructure and the support to do that,” she said. 

She said a target of 5,000 in the first year was “deliverable”, adding: “It would be terrible quite frankly to bring people and not be able to give them the support that they would need in terms of accommodation, resettlement and giving them the opportunity to build a new life in the UK.”

Asked how the UK would get vulnerable people, who may not feel safe leaving their homes, out of Afghanistan, Ms Patel said ministers would work with third party agencies, humanitarian organisations and other governments, including the US and Canada. 

She added that people could also be resettled from neighbouring countries, as well as Afghanistan itself. 

Parliament has been recalled and Prime Minister Boris Johnson is to open a debate in the House of Commons about the situation in Afghanistan from 09:30 BST on Wednesday.

Downing Street said Mr Johnson spoke to US President Joe Biden on Tuesday evening about the evacuation of Kabul.

The leaders “resolved to continue working closely together on this in the days and weeks ahead to allow as many people as possible to leave the country”, a spokesperson said.

Ministers have been rushing to put this scheme together in response to the situation in Afghanistan, with the final details signed off on Tuesday.

The scheme will prioritise those most in need – with the government highlighting women and girls and minority groups.

Information on how to apply is expected soon. 

The scheme is loosely based on the one introduced during the Syrian war, which also saw 20,000 move to the UK from 2014 to 2021.

But ministers acknowledge the practicalities of getting people out of Afghanistan will be considerably more complicated because of the extent of Taliban control. 

Government insiders don’t know the extent to which the new regime will allow people to flee if they so choose. 

There will be funding for the resettlement programme – and the government will work with local councils and devolved governments on where to house Afghans who come to the UK.

Announcing the new Afghan Citizens’ Resettlement Scheme, Mr Johnson said: “We owe a debt of gratitude to all those who have worked with us to make Afghanistan a better place over the last twenty years. 

“Many of them, particularly women, are now in urgent need of our help. I am proud that the UK has been able to put in place this route to help them and their families live safely in the UK.”

The government emphasised the new scheme would “not compromise on national security” and has promised all those arriving will have to pass “strict security checks”.

BBC