HC Deb 30 April 2002 vol 384 cc706-9W
Mr. Wray

To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department how many induction, accommodation and removal centres for asylum seekers there are in(a) England, (b) Scotland and (c) Wales; where they are; and how many people each of them holds. [46981]

Angela Eagle

Currently there is one induction centre in Dover. Generally speaking asylum seekers requiring accommodation will spend approximately one week in the induction centre before being dispersed. Other asylum seekers requesting either subsistence only support or who do not require support will spend between one and two days at the centre. We are proposing to open further induction centres over the coming months close to major ports such as Heathrow and Gatwick and a small number in the regions. There is no ceiling on the number who can be accommodated in an induction centre but typically there are between 200 and 500 in the centre at any one time.

There are no accommodation centres at present but we intend to establish a number of these with a total capacity of 3,000 to accommodate a proportion of new asylum seekers from application through initial decision and any appeal. This will be taken forward on a trial basis. We have identified eight potential sites for accommodation centres. Six of these are in England, one in Scotland and one in Wales.

They are located as follows:

  • QinetiQ (the Defence Establishment Research Agency formerly (DERA)) Pershore, Worcestershire
  • Royal Air Force (RAF) Hemswell, West Lindsey, Lincolnshire
  • Sully Hospital, Cardiff
  • Hooton Park, Ellesmere Port. Cardiff
  • Land vacated by Ministry of Defence (MOD) Logistics, Bicester, Oxfordshire
  • Air West Edinburgh (formerly RAF Tumhouse), Edinburgh
  • RAF Newton, West Bridgeford, Nottinghamshire
  • National Energy Site Killinghome, Grimsby, North Lincolnshire.

The Government are committed to ensuring that the long-term mix of facilities for the support of asylum seekers and management of the asylum processes is based on evidence of what works. The operation of the trial accommodation centres will be thoroughly evaluated, taking account of a number of factors including costs, processing times, ease of access to integration programmes for those granted refugee status and the rate of returns in cases which are refused.

The following removal centres are located in England and Scotland.

Removal centers Location Total capacity1 No of family beds
Campstield Kidlington, Oxford 184
Harmondsworth West Drayton, Middlesex 550 72
Tinsley House Gatwick airport 137 14
Dover2 Dover, Kent 316
Lindholme Doncaster 112
Haslar Gosport, Hampshire 160
Dungavel Strathaven, South Lanarkshire 150 54
1 Including family beds
2 From end April 2002

The total detention capacity at immigration removal centres is 1,609. This figure excludes the 400 places at Oakington Reception Centre and the provision of detention places at Yarl's Wood Removal Centre that is currently unused.

Julie Morgan

To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department how detained asylum seekers are informed of rights they have to apply for bail. [48281]

Angela Eagle

[holding answer 10 April 2002]: The notice (IS91R) served on detainees to inform them of the reasons for their detention also contains details of their rights to apply for bail. The immigration officer serving the notice must sign this form to confirm that the detainee has been informed of these rights. If the detainee does not understand English, the immigration officer must ensure that the form's contents are interpreted.

Vernon Coaker

To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department how many families there were awaiting a final decision on their asylum application in each of the last six months. [51742]

Angela Eagle

[holding answer 23 April 2002]: Information on the number of families awaiting a final decision on their asylum application is not readily available and would be obtained only by examination of individual case files to get information on the outcomes of initial decisions, of subsequent appeals to the Immigration Appellate Authority and to the Tribunal, which would incur disproportionate cost.

An initial decision has been served for around two thirds of asylum applications from families received in April to September 2001 (the latest period for which such data are available).

Mr. Woodward

To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department when the most recent Ofsted inspection of education provision in each(a) detention and (b) removal centre in England took place. [51661]

Angela Eagle

[holding answer 23 April 2002]: There have been no inspections by Ofsted of the children's education provision at the two immigration removal centres which have such provision as neither Harmondsworth nor Dungavel have been operating long enough to warrant such an inspection.

Vernon Coaker

To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department how many(a) separated children and (b) children in families arrived in the UK and made an asylum application in each of the last six months. [51743]

Angela Eagle

[holding answer 23 April 2002]: The table shows the number of unaccompanied children under the age of 18 who have made an asylum application in the period March to August 2001, inclusive. August is the latest month for which data are available.

Unaccompanied children1,2,3, aged 17 or under, applying for asylum to the United Kingdom, March to August 2001
Month Total applications
March 281
April 216
May 281
June 331
July 305
August 471
Total 1,885
1 Unaccompanied at the point of their arrival, and not known to be joining a close relative in the United Kingdom
1 Figures exclude disputed age cases
3 Provisional data

Reliable information on the number of children who have applied for asylum in the United Kingdom, accompanied by an adult, is not readily available and could be obtained only by examination of individual case records and is, therefore, only available at disproportionate cost.

Information on unaccompanied minors is published annually in the statistical bulletin "Asylum Statistics United Kingdom", a copy of which is available in the Library and from the RDS website: http://www.homeoffice.gov.uk/rds/immigration1.html.

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