The UK has to start processing the Syrian refuge claims, more than seven months after the decline of the Assad regime.
Sharan Minister Dame Angela Eagle stated that the Home Office “worked to raise the break” as “the home office” to make sufficient information to determine “.
Government has published updated guidance To decide on Syrian claims for officials.
Dame Angela said that the claims can now be processed, and returned to Syria according to it.
Britain stopped the verdict on Syrian claims for shelter and permanent disposal in December, the President Bashar al-Assad was uprooted by a rebellious aggressive led by the Islamist terrorist group Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS) after years of the civil war.
In a written statement, Dame Angela stated that the stagnation was “an essential step, while no stable, purposeful information was available to make a strong assessment of the risk on return to Syria”.
However, the move left over 7,000 Syrians waiting for a decision on a refuge in Limbo.
Most of these are staying in housing funded by the government, such as hotels.
This stagnation also applies to the Syrian people, who were already given refugee status and were initially given the right to stay in the UK for five years before being able to apply for permanent disposal.
Campaigners say that leaving with this temporary situation makes people difficult to secure jobs or houses.
Welcoming the move, Envara Solomon, CEO of Refugee Council Charity said: “We know that the stagnation in decision making had left the Syrian people trapped in the ahead, unable to work, moving forward with their lives and scared for their future.
“However, the situation in Syria remains unstable, and we urge the government to ensure that each asylum application is evaluated on the basis of case by-case, ensuring safety and safety of Syrians, which will face excessive risk when returning.”
Data associated with HTS – a terrorist group nominated by the UK – now runs the country, in which HTS leader Ahmed Al -Shara nominated as the interim president of Syria earlier this year.
Under the United Nations Refugee Conference, a person must be “well established of harassment” to provide a person’s refuge and refugee status.
The update guidance of the house office on Syria states that “breaks in law and order or does not give rise to a well -established fear in itself in indefinite security situations”.
“There is not enough basis to assume that Syria has a real risk of severe losses because there is a serious and personal threat to a citizen’s life or individual, which is due to indiscriminate violence in the state of international or internal armed conflict,” it says.
“All matters should be considered their personal facts, with the on Onas on the person to display that they face harassment or serious losses.”
The ministers have earlier suggested that most of the Syrians who reached Britain before Assad’s collapse were fleeing from governance, and some can now wish to return.
On the issue of returns, guidance notes that after a change in the government, the opponents of the former Assad regime are “unlikely to be at risk on returning to Syria on that basis”.
On the situation for religious minorities, it suggests that Kurdish, Christians, Drews, and Shia Muslims “are unlikely to face the real risk of harassment or serious damage from the state” and “otherwise the person is on the person to display”.
However, it says that under the actual control of the Syrian National Army, a alliance of Kurdish -Turkish -supported rebel groups in areas under the actual control of the Syrian National Army – “is the possibility of” the real risk of harassment or serious loss “on the basis of their ethnicity or perceived political opinion”.
It also states that although the new government has sought to assure the members of the addition to the minority, but they will not be subject to violent vengeance, the bonfire is likely to “face the real risk of harassment or serious loss from the state due to their religion and/or a political opinion”.
Many of the political and military elite of former Assad rule belonged to Alvite sect.
Guidance notes that in March In addition, members of the minor minority were subject to a series of attacks Which killed the estimated 800 people, in which HTS-condemned groups reported to be involved in it.
Earlier this month, Foreign Secretary David Lammi met interim president Al-Shra, as he became the first UK minister to visit Syria as the country’s civil war started 14 years ago due to the rebellion.
It is also UK Slowly lift sanctions on Syria,