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UK’s immigration minister says int’l refugee rules make it too easy to seek asylum

Published:Wednesday | September 27, 2023 | 3:45 PM
Britain's Home Secretary Suella Braverman takes questions following a speech on immigration at the American Enterprise Institute on Tuesday, September 26, 2023, in Washington. (AP Photo/Kevin Wolf)

LONDON (AP) — Britain's immigration minister argued Tuesday that international refugee rules must be rewritten to reduce the number of people entitled to protection, as the Conservative government seeks international support for its tough stance on unauthorised migration.

Home Secretary Suella Braverman said people who faced discrimination for their gender or sexuality should not be granted asylum unless they were “fleeing a real risk of death, torture, oppression or violence.”

“Where individuals are being persecuted, it is right that we offer sanctuary,” Braverman told an audience in Washington.

“But we will not be able to sustain an asylum system if in effect, simply being gay, or a woman, or fearful of discrimination in your country of origin, is sufficient to qualify for protection.”

Braverman said that the bar for asylum claims had been lowered over the decades since the 1951 United Nations Refugee Convention.

She questioned whether “well-intentioned legal conventions and treaties” from decades ago are “fit for our modern age” of jet travel, smartphones and the Internet.

In a speech to conservative think-tank the American Enterprise Institute, Braverman called for changes to rules to prevent asylum-seekers travelling through “multiple safe countries … while they pick their preferred destination.”

She said such migrants should “cease to be treated as refugees” once they leave the first safe country they come to.

“We are living in a new world bound by outdated legal models,” she said, calling uncontrolled and irregular migration “an existential challenge” to the West.

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