We reproduce an article extracted from the Irish Times (author Carl O'Brien, dating 12 August 2014) highlighting the difficulties experienced by asylum seekers who have been denied the right to work in Ireland and left dependent from the direct provision system for years:
The Government is to establish a working group next month to review the State’s controversial direct provision system for asylum seekers. Minister for Justice Frances Fitzgerald said issues such as welfare payments for adults and children, restrictions to third-level education and supports for children will be among the issues to be examined.
However, she ruled out extending the right to work for asylum seekers who have been in the system for long periods, due to the high level of unemployment in the State.
She also pledged a new system to streamline the processing of asylum applications will be in place midway through next year. “We’re very conscious of the individual people who are in these circumstances and if there are initiatives that can be taken on humanitarian grounds, they will be taken,” she told The Irish Times.
She also pledged a new system to streamline the processing of asylum applications will be in place midway through next year. “We’re very conscious of the individual people who are in these circumstances and if there are initiatives that can be taken on humanitarian grounds, they will be taken,” she told The Irish Times.
Unfettered right
“But we’re not talking about an amnesty, we’re not talking about an unfettered right to work . . .
the law has resulted in long delays and there has been a human cost to that.”
More than 4,000 asylum seekers – including 1,600 children – live in reception centres across the State. The average length of stay is almost four years, though hundreds have spent seven or more years in these settings.
Ireland has faced criticism by human rights groups for the duration applicants spend in the system, along with restrictions on work and welfare. The country is one of two EU member states that prohibit asylum seekers from working. Welfare payments – €19.10 for adults and €9.60 for children – have not changed in 14 years.
Ms Fitzgerald said terms of reference for the working group have yet to be formalised, though it will include Minister of State Aodhán Ó Riordáin, an international expert in asylum, and input from non- governmental organisations. The UN’s refugee agency, the UNHCR, last night said the decision to establish a working group was a positive development and it stood ready to contribute towards it. Minister for Justice Frances Fitzgerald said issues such as welfare payments for adults and children, restrictions to third-level education and supports for children will be among the issues to be examined.
Tackle a problem
Ms Fitzgerald said a new system for processing asylum applications will tackle a problem at the heart of the system, where asylum seekers are obliged to apply for different forms of protection – such as refugee status and subsidiary protection – one after the other.This ends up stretching the process out over many years. Successive governments have pledged, but failed, to enact an immigration, residence and protection Bill, that would provide for a single procedure where all applications could be lodged together. Ms Fitzgerald said aspects of this Bill that relate to reforming the application process will be separated and fast-tracked into law.
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