PHOTO | FILE This photo taken on July 31, 2011, shows Somali refugees
walking in the new Ifo-extension at the Dadaab refugee camp in Kenya,
the largest refugee camp in the world. Kenya has been identified as one
of the countries that will host people seeking asylum in Britain as
their applications are processed.
AFP
By PETER LEFTIE pmutibo@ke.nationmedia.com
Posted Wednesday, May 1 2013
Posted Wednesday, May 1 2013
In Summary
MPs propose that London pays Nairobi to put up asylum seekers
Kenya has been identified as one of the
countries that will host people seeking asylum in Britain as their
applications are processed.
Reports in the Business Daily and the UK’s Guardian
said a group of British MPs forwarded the proposal to Prime Minister
David Cameron’s government asking that it pays Kenya and other countries
to host immigrants in “processing camps.”
The proposal, contained in a report by the
Conservative Way Forward group and authored by Tory MP Julian Brazier,
says the influx of immigrants is putting a strain on infrastructure.
“We must consider making treaties with democratic
Third World countries with plenty of space (few are as crowded as the
UK)… if we could secure a deal with Kenya, it would be worth our while
to make a considerable payment per capita to them to provide a haven for
Somali asylum seekers, sent from Britain to have their cases examined,”
Mr Brazier is quoted saying.
Kenya, however, says it has not received any formal proposal from the UK to provide “safe houses”.
“We have not received any request from the UK. I
have only read about the reports in the Press,” the Political and
Diplomatic Secretary at the Foreign Affairs ministry, Mr Patrick Wamoto,
said.
If approved, the proposal could see thousands of asylum seekers confined in leased houses in Kenya.
The move, the Conservative MPs argue, will help stem illegal immigrants.
Approve move
Most immigrants are housed in secure locations inside Britain.
Kenya hosts thousands of refugees, mainly from
war-ravaged Somalia. It remains to be seen if the new government will
approve the move. The country also hosts some 10,000 British soldiers in
training.
Last month, Mr Cameron called for stringent measures to curb “easy” granting of citizenship to foreigners.
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