Multiple people receiving asylum support in West Lindsey – as numbers jump across UK

Multiple people were receiving asylum support in West Lindsey, new figures show – amid a surge across the country.
Watch more of our videos on Shots! 
and live on Freeview channel 276
Visit Shots! now

The figures come as a leading refugee charity predicts the Government will struggle to commit to its pledge to clear the backlog in asylum applications by the end of next year.

While awaiting a decision, asylum seekers are unable to work but can be entitled to financial assistance and accommodation through what is known as Section 95 support.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

Home Office figures show two people in West Lindsey were receiving such support as of the end of September – the same as in September 2021.

Some 101,000 people were receiving some form of asylum support at the end of September.Some 101,000 people were receiving some form of asylum support at the end of September.
Some 101,000 people were receiving some form of asylum support at the end of September.

It was a different picture across the UK, where 101,000 people were receiving some form of asylum support at the end of September, up 46 per cent from the same time last year.

This included 58,000 people receiving Section 95 support, up from 46,000 the year before.

Recent refugees from Ukraine and Afghanistan receive different forms of support and are therefore not included in these figures.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

Separate Home Office data shows nearly 23,000 Afghans had arrived in the UK as of November 4, while 150,000 Ukrainians had arrived by December 12.

Prime Minister Rishi Sunak has recently vowed to clear the backlog of 117,000 asylum claims by the end of 2023.

He said the Government was hiring more caseworkers and overhauling the system for processing system.

Read More
Demolition work is underway in Gainsborough to make way for new cinema

Downing Street later revised this figure, saying the Government would only seek to clear the 92,000 claims made before June – leading to accusations the plan was already “falling apart” by the Labour party.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

Shadow home secretary Yvette Cooper said: “No-one trusts the Conservatives to fix the asylum system they’ve broken over the last 12 years.”

Last year saw a significant rise people in the number of people on Section 98 support across the UK, which is given to those who appear destitute and are waiting to see if they are eligible for Section 95.

More than 37,000 people were being provided with such support at the end of September, dwarfing the nearly 17,000 at the same point last year.

The Refugee Council, a campaign group for refugees, said the Prime Minister “had offered little in terms of concrete steps” to clear the backlog, adding it is concerned the commitment will not be delivered.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

Tamsin Baxter, charity executive director of external affairs, said: “As the number of people waiting for a decision grows, so does the number of people left in limbo, unable to work and dependent on the Home Office for accommodation and financial support.”

Across the East Midlands, 2,909 people were receiving Section 95 support at the end of September, up from 2,298 in September 2021.

Meanwhile, 1,023 asylum seekers have been resettled across the region through various schemes since 2014.

The Home Office said it is working on clearing “legacy cases” from before the end of June, when the asylum processing system was changed.

It said the new Nationality and Borders Act means it can now differentiate claims based on whether people arrived in the UK through “legal or illegal routes”.