Tories call on Home Office to stop excluding young Hong Kongers from BNO scheme


Senior Tory MPs are calling on the Home Office to extend the UK’s settlement route for Hong Kong nationals to include swathes of young people who are currently “unfairly” excluded.

An amendment to the Nationality and Borders Bill, tabled this week by Conservative MP Damian Green and supported by Tom Tugendhat and 11 other Tory MPs, would enable Hong Kongers with at least one parent who is a BNO citizen to apply for a UK visa.

It comes after The Independent revealed last month that Young Hong Kongers who fled police brutality are “languishing” in the UK asylum system because they are not able to benefit from the British National Overseas (BNO) scheme due to their age.

The scheme, which is projected to receive around 422,000 applications from Hong Kong nationals in its first four years, requires that applicants hold a BNO passport. These documents were issued to citizens following the handover of Hong Kong from the UK to China in 1997.

While it allows applicants to bring relatives, including adult children, with them to the UK, many young people have had to flee alone because their parents wish to remain in Hong Kong.

If the amendment were accepted, it would enable those born after 1997 to resettle in Britain on the basis of the BNO status of one or both of their parents, rather than having to travel with them.



Many of these young people may well have been involved in the protests and therefore some of them have already suffered from the new security law, and others may in the future

Damian Green MP

Mr Green, who was immigration minister from 2010 until 2012, told The Independent that Britain has a “moral obligation” to the young Hong Kong citizens who are currently excluded from the programme and urged ministers to accept his amendment in order to rectify an “unfair” policy.

“Many of these young people may well have been involved in the protests and therefore some of them have already suffered from the new security law, and others may in the future,” he said.

“I think it would be perfectly possible for the system to cope with this. And of course many of these people will otherwise claim asylum, so one of the beneficial side effects of accepting my amendment would be to relief some pressure on the asylum system.”

Home Office figures show there was an almost 500 per cent increase in asylum claims from Hong Kong nationals in the year to June 2021, rising to 124 from 21 the previous year. Fourteen of these were unaccompanied minors – the first time on record that the UK has received asylum claims from children from the city state.

Teenagers and young people from Hong Kong have told The Independent they have been forced to claim asylum in the UK, leaving them waiting for a year or more for a decision while being banned from working and often prevented from studying.

Luke de Pulford, coordinator of the Inter-Parliamentary Alliance on China (IPAC) and adviser to Hong Kong Watch, welcomed the amendment, saying it was about “helping the people who need it most”.

“Right now children are in prison in Hong Kong for doing nothing other than defending their constitution, which the UK is bound by treaty to defend. We need to…



Read More: Tories call on Home Office to stop excluding young Hong Kongers from BNO scheme

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