|
UK Governments immigration
cap challenged
24 September 2010
The
Joint Council for the Welfare of Immigrants has
launched a legal challenge to the interim immigration
caps imposed by the Uk coalition government on 28
June 2010. The interim cap will be replaced by a
permanent cap in 2011. The justification for the
eventual permanent cap and the current interim cap
has been to scale back net migration to the
levels of the 1990s and to stop a sudden surge
in applications respectively. Habib
Rahman, Chief Executive of the Joint Council for
the Welfare of Immigrants said: JCWI is very
concerned about the immense damage the interim cap
appears to already be doing to British businesses."
"We are also concerned
by its harsh and disproportionate nature. JCWI
considers that the caps are a further attempt
by the government to blame part of the financial
difficulties the country finds itself in on migrants.
The idea of immigrants coming to the UK and taking
our jobs no longer has a place in modern
Britain. Migrants fill the skills gap, create
jobs and help rejuvenate the economy, he
added.
JCWIs lawyer, Shahram
Taghavi of Simons Muirhead & Burton, said:
The coalition government has once again
sought to rush through significant changes to
the United Kingdoms immigration laws while
sidestepping proper Parliamentary process. The
Court of Appeal ruled earlier this Summer that
the Secretary of State has adopted her Points-Based
System in a partially unconstitutional manner.
Lord Justice Sedley:
'But the law . . . cannot simply abandon
a constitutional principle which for four centuries
has stood as a pillar of the separation of powers
in what is today a democracy under the rule
of law. The answer has to be that ministers
are to be expected to do what is required of
them: Parliament will expect the Home Secretary
to lay before it any rules by which he or she
proposes to manage immigration; the courts will
expect such rules, like any other source of
law, to be those and only those which have Parliament's
approval . . .
I am therefore surprised
to see that, despite that ruling, the Secretary
of State has again sought to avoid Parliamentary
scrutiny on such an important change to British
immigration laws, a change which, unusually, also
impacts upon British businesses.
The case is expected to he
heard by the High Court in October.
Top |