Logo

 

Banner Image:   National-News-banner-Purple
Template Mode:   Baptist Times
Icon
    Post     Tweet

Churches challenge Government on immigration

Christians have challenged the Government to not just accept the ‘brightest and best’ immigrants, and show greater humanity towards the most vulnerable.



RefugeeThe call came at the annual conference of the Churches’ Refugee Network conference, which provides a collective and ecumenical voice on issues of asylum and immigration.  

One of the key-note speakers at the event in Sheffield on Saturday was Ruth Grove-White, policy director of advocacy NGO Migrants’ Rights Network. She said that fast tracks for those who can pay means that ability to pay has now become ‘our governing standard’, and called for a more level playing-field ‘not tilted towards the privileged and the brightest and best’. She added that greater humanity towards the most vulnerable would stop the UK system of indefinite detention being the harshest in Europe.

She challenged politicians to turn the debate towards economic and cultural hope for an inclusive future, and resist ‘exploiting media-fed fears of immigration’. Childline has already reported increased school bullying about immigration status in the wake of media and government publicity.
Many of these concerns were picked up in a Position Statement approved by the conference.

As well as affirming ‘the biblical Christian and Jewish traditions of the importance of welcoming strangers’, the statement warned that the Immigration Bill would create damaging divisions within national life, and drew attention to specific concerns about detention, destitution, cuts in access to justice, and the cruelty and inequity of family migration rules.

Christians from churches from across the country attended the event, which was titled ‘Under the Radar: what Room for Refugees?’. Among them were asylum seekers from countries such as Afghanistan, Iran, Cameroon and Zimbabwe: some had gained leave to remain in the UK, others had waited up to ten years for a Home Office decision.

The conference was addressed by a former vice-president of Methodist Conference and now Deputy Chair of the BMA GP committee, Dr Richard Vautrey. In a hard-hitting key-note address he warned that charging for surgery visits held unplanned outcomes for the NHS. The NHS depends on refugees and migrant workers, many of whom later carry their skills and experience back to their original country. Surgery staff have neither the time nor the knowledge to assess the validity of a variety of immigration documents.

In a theological commentary on the addresses, the Revd Fleur Houston of the United Reformed Church said that Christianity called for all people to be treated the same, not singling out the privileged. She said it was not enough to welcome the stranger; we should also be ready to receive from them. Our society is wounded by stories of injustice, disconfirmation and abuse, she continued, underlining the point that statistics used by Government ‘often intentionally mislead’.

The conference was enlivened at intervals by the Choir of Christ Abiding Ministries International, from Sheffield’s Hope of Glory Church, and welcomed and fed by Sheffield’s City of Sanctuary team. There were also workshops in which people shared experiences of destitution, housing, health, legal matters and campaigning.
 

To find our more about the Churches' Refugee Network, visit https://ctbi.org.uk/churches-refugee-network/

Baptist Times, 08/04/2014
    Post     Tweet
Baptist prayer and fasting gatherings on 26 September
Prayer and fasting gatherings with a mission focus are being hosted by Baptist churches across England and Wales on 26 September
Still time to respond to the findings of Project Violet
Responses are already coming in with commitments to action that will be reported to Baptist Union Council in October - and local churches and other stakeholders in Baptist life have until 30 September to respond to the project's findings
'We hold everyone affected by this awful event in our hearts and our prayers' 
Church leaders in Merseyside have shared a statement in the wake of the knife attack in Southport on Monday
'His contribution to the life of the Baptists will endure'
Tributes have been paid to Brian Haymes, described as 'one of the greatest British Baptist figures of modern times', who has died aged 84
'If you have a heart for seeing people reached for Jesus, this is for you' 
Everyone Everywhere, the recently launched Baptist collaboration that seeks to equip Baptists to share Jesus fully, is hosting a national conference on Tuesday, 8 October
Research documents Covid faith impact
Professor Paul Weller, a Baptist church member, introduces an accessible digest and analysis of Covid-related research and resources (2020-2023) on Christian Faith Based Organisations (FBO) in Great Britain
     Latest News 
    Posted: 26/02/2024