A selection of recent media reports

Police battle to control EDL and UAF protest in Bolton
Police are trying to contain thousands of demonstrators from the English Defence League (EDL) and Unite Against Fascism ...
BBC News Beds, Bucks & Herts (20-Mar-2010)
Rise in marriages between cousins 'putting children at risk of birth defects', warns Baroness
A rise in the number of marriages between cousins in Britain has prompted calls for a crackdown on the practice amid war...
The Mail On Sunday (20-Mar-2010)
Jail for illegal immigrant who tended to drugs
An illegal immigrant caught tending to 350 plants in a cannabis factory has been jailed for two...
This is Leicestershire (20-Mar-2010)
MIGRANTS FOUND LIVING IN FAMILY TREE HOUSE
SQUATTERS have set up a tree house after invading the gardens of family homes. They have constructed makeshift shelters...
Daily Star (20-Mar-2010)
UK BETTER OFF OUT OF EU
THE only way to solve Britains economic and immigration problems is to leave Europe, the UK Independence Party said last...
Daily Express (20-Mar-2010)
FOREIGN WORKER CURBS ONLY CUT 3,000
TIGHTER rules to cover highly skilled migrant workers will only cut the number of them coming to Britain by about 3,000 ...
Daily Express (20-Mar-2010)
Residents powerless to remove illegal immigrants from their gardens
At first sight, the piles of rubbish and debris strewn across this garden make it look just like a rubbish tip.
Daily Mail (19-Mar-2010)
IMMIGRANT S 16-MILE CHANNEL TUNNEL U-TURN
AN ILLEGAL immigrant walked 16 miles through the Channel Tunnel to the UK before changing his mind and telling police: ...
Daily Express (19-Mar-2010)
MPs debate visa rights for migrant domestic workers
Martin Salter, Labour MP for Reading West, opened a debate in Westminster Hall to highlight the abuse of migrant domesti...
The United Kingdom Parliament (18-Mar-2010)
Immigrant flees 'racist' Brits
AN exhausted illegal immigrant spent hours trying to cross into the UK before abandoning the attempt because Brits "ar...
Online Sun (18-Mar-2010)
Le Pen's back, and winning again
Fuelled by Nicolas Sarkozy's anti-Muslim 'identity' debate, the Front National is punching above its weight in regional....
Guardian.co.uk (18-Mar-2010)
Heads should be able to fire BNP teachers, says David Cameron
Tory leader's attempt to reach out to black voters continues at event in south-east...
Guardian.co.uk (18-Mar-2010)
£60k sex swap for migrant
A TURKISH transsexual woman granted UK asylum is having at least £60,000-worth of NHS surgery to become a man called...
Online Sun (18-Mar-2010)
Minister announces over £750,000 of Inclusion Grant Funding
Social Justice and Local Government Minister Carl Sargeant has announced £766,190 of funding to support organisations th...
Welsh Assembly Government (17-Mar-2010)
Extra funds as primary pupil numbers rise in Bristol
More than £2m will have to be spent on extra classrooms in Bristol primary schools to cope with more pupils. The demand...
BBC News Bristol (17-Mar-2010)
CONVICTED RAPIST WHO FLED COUNTRY HUNTED IN HOLLAND
A RUNAWAY rapist whose bid to dodge justice sparked an outcry is being hunted in the ­Netherlands, it was revealed...
Daily Express (17-Mar-2010)
Euroworld raided after illegal workers tip-off
Mailing house Euroworld Direct Marketing could face a £90,000 fine for knowingly employing illegal workers following a r...
PrintWeek (17-Mar-2010)
Multiculturalism undermines diversity
Kenan Malik: Cif is four: As a political policy, multiculturalism's desire to put people in boxes has left many minoriti...
U TV (17-Mar-2010)
Factbox - Voters' views on "Broken Britain"
REDDITCH, England (Reuters) - Concern about crime regularly comes top in opinion polls of British voters despite figures...
Reuters UK (17-Mar-2010)
Leeds takeaway raids: Seven more workers held
Fingerprint scanners and spot ID checks uncovered seven suspected illegal workers at two Leeds...
Yorkshire Evening Post (17-Mar-2010)

Health 5.7

NHS Treatment for Failed Asylum Seekers[1]

1 This issue came before the Court of Appeal in a judicial review case, Regina (A) v. Secretary of State for Health in an appeal by the Secretary of State against an adverse ruling in the High Court. A full report is on the Court of Appeal’s website and a summary was published in The Times Law Report on 2 April 2009.

2 The case was brought by a failed Palestinian asylum seeker who had been undergoing treatment for a serious condition and who, it was accepted, could not be returned to his country of origin. The Court considered at some length the relevant provisions of legislation governing the National Health Service and of immigration legislation. Section 1 of the National Health Service Act 2006 imposes a duty on the Secretary of State for Health to provide health services free of charge to the people of England. (Separate legislation covers Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland.) Regulations made under the Act impose on NHS Trusts an obligation to charge persons who are not either (1) ordinarily resident in England or (2) have lived in the United Kingdom lawfully for 12 months or more, for treatment other than that provided by accident and emergency departments or otherwise judged to be urgent. The expression “ordinarily resident” has long been established in income tax law and is also relevant in other branches of the law. Guidance issued by the Department of Health to NHS Trusts relies on a decision of the House of Lords, (Ex parte Nilsh Shah [1983] 2AC 309, per Lord Scarman at pages 343-4) for a definition for Trusts to apply in deciding whether patients are to be regarded as ordinarily resident for the purposes of charging for treatment. Trusts are required to consider whether the patients are living lawfully in the United Kingdom voluntarily and for settled purposes as part of the regular order of their lives for the time being, whether they have an identifiable purpose for their residence here and whether that purpose has a sufficient degree of continuity to be properly described as settled. In the light of this the Court had to establish the immigration status of a failed asylum seeker who could not be returned. Some asylum seekers enter the United Kingdom lawfully through regular means and apply on arrival. They are granted temporary admission, which protects them against deportation and continues for so long as their applications and any subsequent appeals against refusal are pending – a process which can take years. Applicants who enter illegally in the first place do not have temporary admission but enjoy the same protection after applying. This protection arises from Article 33.1 of the 1951 Geneva Convention on the Status of Refugees, which prohibits contracting States from removing any asylum seeker “to the frontiers of territories where his life or freedom would be threatened on account of his race, religion, nationality, membership of a particular social group or political opinion”.

3 It should be made clear at this point that an asylum seeker whose case is still pending or who has been accepted as a refugee is entitled to exemption from charges. After consideration of all relevant authorities, the Court concluded that an asylum seeker in the position of the appellant in this case was not ordinarily resident in the United Kingdom and therefore not eligible to free treatment by the NHS as of right. The Court referred to the words of section 1 of the National Health Service Act 2006 which, as already noted, imposes on the Secretary of State a duty to provide free health services to the people of England but not to all the people in England. Any period, no matter how long, spent in the United Kingdom by a failed asylum seeker could not entitle him to be considered as ordinarily resident. To quote again from Lord Scarman in the case already mentioned, “if [the appellant’s] presence in the country is unlawful, for example in breach of the immigration laws, he cannot rely on his unlawful residence as constituting ordinary residence”.

4 An NHS Trust is therefore entitled to charge failed asylum seekers for treatment other than treatment in accident and emergency departments or urgent treatment, the latter meaning that it is not immediately necessary but cannot wait until the patient returns home, which in the case of a patient such as the appellant in this case may not be for many years. In the case of non-urgent treatment such as elective surgery, the Trust is entitled to charge, but also has a discretion to refuse treatment if, as will invariably be the case with failed asylum seekers, there is no prospect of the patient’s ever being able to afford to pay for it. To quote paragraph 77 of the judgment of Lord Justice Ward, referring to non-urgent treatment:

“My conclusion is that it is implicit in the Guidance [i.e. the Guidance issued to NHS Trusts] that there is a discretion to withhold treatment but there is also a discretion to allow treatment to be given when there is no prospect of paying for it. How that discretion is to be exercised may depend on how long the failed asylum seeker will remain at large and the plight of those who cannot return should be identified and clarified in the Guidance.

5 The significance of the words I have italicised is that counsel for the appellant had sought a declaration that the Guidance was unlawful. This was refused , but the Court felt that in this particular area it needed to be improved.

Harry Mitchell QC
Honorary Legal Adviser
Migration Watch

3 April, 2009

Notes

  1. See also Briefing Paper 5.3 – Access to the NHS