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Ukraine War: UK Households Offered £350 a Month For Hosting Refugees

Indians at UK - Ukraine Refugees

Housing Secretary Michael Gove told the BBC tens of thousands of people could come to the UK under the scheme and he may offer a room to a refugee. But the Refugee Council is concerned about the level of support for those traumatised by war. Labour said there were unanswered questions, accusing the government of “dragging its feet” over the crisis.

Indians at UK - Ukraine Refugees

Under the Homes for Ukraine scheme, people will be able to nominate a named individual or a family to stay with them rent-free, or in another property, for at least six months. A website to express an interest in being a sponsor will launch on Monday.

Mr Gove also told the BBC’s Sunday Morning programme the government was looking at using the properties of Russian oligarchs sanctioned by the UK for “humanitarian purposes” but there was “quite a high legal bar” and this measure would lapse as sanctions ended. Retailers Sainsbury’s, Marks & Spencer and Morrisons are among the UK companies offering to employ Ukrainian refugees.

Asos said it wanted to attract Ukraine’s strong technical engineering skillset, while soap shop Lush said it would open up internal vacancies to refugees. Addressing a rally outside Downing Street on Sunday, Ukraine’s ambassador to the UK, Vadym Prystaiko, called for more support, weapons and humanitarian assistance.

Local authorities will also receive £10,500 in extra funding per refugee for support services – with more for children of school age, the Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities said. More than 2.5 million people have so far fled Ukraine because of Russia’s invasion, in what the UN has called the fastest-growing refugee crisis since World War Two.

The government has faced criticism – including from its own MPs – over the speed and scale of its response. Defending the government’s response, Mr Gove told the BBC the number of Ukrainians fleeing the war who had been granted visas had now risen to 3,000. At the moment, only those fleeing the conflict who have family connections in the UK are able to make an application via the Ukraine Family Scheme. Other visas are available but application centres in Ukraine are closed.

Under the new scheme sponsors in the UK will not be required to know the refugees in advance and there will be no limit on numbers. Ukrainians on the scheme will be given leave to remain for three years, with the right to work and access public services. Mr Gove told the BBC that he anticipated “tens of thousands” of Ukrainians might be taken in by UK families with the first arrivals “within a week”.

Applications will be made online, with both sponsors being vetted and refugees having to go through security checks. The sponsor will get a “thank you” payment of £350 a month. Asked if he would take a Ukrainian refugee into his home, Mr Gove said “yes” and that he was “exploring what I can do”. “Without going into my personal circumstances, there are a couple of things I need to sort out – but yes,” he added. In a later phase of the scheme, organisations such as charities and churches will also be able to sponsor refugees, though there is no start date for this yet.

Indians at UK - Michael Gove

Two weeks since it was announced, we now have some details of the scheme allowing people to host refugees in their homes. The idea is a simple one, but the practicalities of matching those fleeing Russia’s invasion with willing households in the UK won’t be easy.

Aiming to place people with hosts within a fortnight is ambitious and the system is untested. Ministers are keen to avoid using hotels or other temporary accommodation used by Afghans last year and are adamant that security checks should stay in place on those fleeing Ukraine.

But for some Conservative MPs, let alone Labour and other opposition parties, the government’s response has fallen short. And it’s no accident that Michael Gove – and not the Home Secretary Priti Patel – is fronting the latest efforts to smooth out and speed up the process of settling people in the UK. What ministers have described as a cross-government approach has looked at times like inter-departmental wrangling over who’s best placed to get things done.

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