@prefix rdf: . @prefix xsd: . @prefix dcterms: . @prefix skos: . @prefix rdfs: . @prefix api: . @prefix parl: . parl:answer ; parl:answeringDeptId "1" ; parl:answeringDeptPrinted "Home Office" ; parl:answeringDeptShortName "Home Office" ; parl:answeringDeptSortName "Home Office" ; parl:hansardHeading "Asylum: Health Services" ; parl:houseId "2" ; parl:legislature ; parl:questionText "To ask Her Majesty’s Government what access young asylum seekers have to health provision, once they reach the age of 18." ; parl:registeredInterest false ; parl:tablingMember ; parl:tablingMemberPrinted "Lord Roberts of Llandudno" ; parl:uin "HL2228" ; dcterms:date "2014-10-20"^^xsd:dateTime . parl:answerText "

The annual number of asylum appeals lodged and the percentage of asylum appeals determined that were successful for 2005 and 2008 are shown in the table attached.

Data for asylum applications, asylum appeals lodged and the percentage of asylum appeals determined that were successful for 2011 and 2013 is available in published data and can be found in the links listed in the bullets below:

• Data for asylum applications can be found in table ‘as 01’ of the ‘Asylum data tables immigration statistics April to June 2014 volume 1’ is available at: https://www.gov.uk/government/statistics/immigration-statistics-april-to-june-2014-data-tables.

• Data for asylum appeals lodged and % of appeals allowed is available at: https://www.gov.uk/government/collections/tribunals-statistics

The volumes listed in the table and links above are not necessarily the same cohort of cases. As a result we are unable to provide data on the percentage of asylum applications in the years requested that resulted in an appeal.

Table showing asylum appeals lodged and percentage of asylum appeals determined that were successful.

2005[1][2][3]

2008

Asylum Appeals lodged

24,891

11,008

Appeals determined by the IAA/AIT

32,611

10,057

% Asylum appeals allowed (of those determined)[4]

18%

25%

[1] Appeals were dealt with by the Immigration Appellate Authority (IAA) until April 2005, by the Asylum and Immigration Tribunal (AIT) from Apr 2005 to Feb 2010, and since then by the First-tier Tribunal Immigration and Asylum Chamber.

[2] 2005 lodgement figures exclude appeals dismissed at the Preliminary Issue stage (out of time or invalid). HMCTS now include this category of appeal in Official Statistics data, from 1st April 2007.

[3] The 2005 asylum appeals lodged figure may not match figures previously in the public domain due to differing dates of extraction from the case management database. See link to archive http://webarchive.nationalarchives.gov.uk/20110206074952/http://www.tribunals.gov.uk/ImmigrationAsylum/

[4] "determined" means decided by a judge and excludes withdrawn appeals.

" ; parl:answeringMember ; parl:answeringMemberPrinted "Lord Bates" ; parl:dateOfAnswer "2014-11-05"^^xsd:dateTime ; parl:groupedQuestionUIN "HL2226" ; parl:isMinisterialCorrection false ; parl:questionFirstAnswered "2014-11-05T14:33:12.6052318Z"^^xsd:dateTime . parl:answerText "

The Azure card is issued to destitute failed asylum seekers who require support because they are temporarily unable to leave the United Kingdom and can be used at most of the main supermarket chains to purchase food and other essential items. The performance of the card is kept under regular review and the views of reputable partners such as the Red Cross are carefully considered but the Government is satisfied that it is an effective way of ensuring the individuals are able to meet their essential living needs and not left destitute.

" ; parl:answeringMember ; parl:answeringMemberPrinted "Lord Bates" ; parl:dateOfAnswer "2014-10-27"^^xsd:dateTime ; parl:isMinisterialCorrection false ; parl:questionFirstAnswered "2014-10-27T12:15:07.651748Z"^^xsd:dateTime . rdfs:label "Biography information for Lord Roberts of Llandudno" . parl:answer ; parl:answeringDeptId "1" ; parl:answeringDeptPrinted "Home Office" ; parl:answeringDeptShortName "Home Office" ; parl:answeringDeptSortName "Home Office" ; parl:hansardHeading "Asylum: Finance" ; parl:houseId "2" ; parl:legislature ; parl:questionText "To ask Her Majesty’s Government what is their response to the conclusion of the House of Commons Home Affairs Committee that \"section 4 is not the solution for people who have been refused but cannot be returned\" as stated in their report Asylum (7th Report of session 2013–14, HC 71)." ; parl:registeredInterest false ; parl:tablingMember ; parl:tablingMemberPrinted "Lord Roberts of Llandudno" ; parl:uin "HL2281" ; dcterms:date "2014-10-21"^^xsd:dateTime . parl:answerText "

The Azure card is issued to destitute failed asylum seekers accommodated under section 4 of the Immigration and Asylum Act 1999 because they are temporarily unable to leave the United Kingdom. The card can be used at most of the main supermarket chains to purchase food and other essential items. The performance of the card is kept under regular review but the Government is satisfied that it is an effective way of ensuring that recipients are able to meet their essential living needs and are not left destitute.

The Government therefore has no plans to abolish the card or change legislation to allow people supported under section 4 to receive cash instead.

The total administrative costs of the card scheme since it was introduced in 2009 are approximately £1,515,000. Estimated administrative costs for the current financial year are £200,000.

The Government published its response to the House of Commons Home Affairs Committee report about asylum procedures in December 2013 (cm 8769). A response to the Committee’s views on section 4 support was set out on page 18-19.

" ; parl:answeringMember ; parl:answeringMemberPrinted "Lord Bates" ; parl:dateOfAnswer "2014-10-28"^^xsd:dateTime ; parl:groupedQuestionUIN "HL2279" , "HL2280" , "HL2277" , "HL2278" ; parl:isMinisterialCorrection false ; parl:questionFirstAnswered "2014-10-28T15:17:56.2935035Z"^^xsd:dateTime . parl:answer ; parl:answeringDeptId "1" ; parl:answeringDeptPrinted "Home Office" ; parl:answeringDeptShortName "Home Office" ; parl:answeringDeptSortName "Home Office" ; parl:hansardHeading "Asylum: Finance" ; parl:houseId "2" ; parl:legislature ; parl:questionText "To ask Her Majesty’s Government how many asylum claimants are left without any state support, on reaching the age of 18." ; parl:registeredInterest false ; parl:tablingMember ; parl:tablingMemberPrinted "Lord Roberts of Llandudno" ; parl:uin "HL2227" ; dcterms:date "2014-10-20"^^xsd:dateTime . parl:answer ; parl:answeringDeptId "1" ; parl:answeringDeptPrinted "Home Office" ; parl:answeringDeptShortName "Home Office" ; parl:answeringDeptSortName "Home Office" ; parl:hansardHeading "Asylum: Finance" ; parl:houseId "2" ; parl:legislature ; parl:questionText "To ask Her Majesty’s Government what is their forecast annual cost for administering the Azure card payment scheme in the coming year." ; parl:registeredInterest false ; parl:tablingMember ; parl:tablingMemberPrinted "Lord Roberts of Llandudno" ; parl:uin "HL2280" ; dcterms:date "2014-10-21"^^xsd:dateTime . parl:answer ; parl:answeringDeptId "1" ; parl:answeringDeptPrinted "Home Office" ; parl:answeringDeptShortName "Home Office" ; parl:answeringDeptSortName "Home Office" ; parl:hansardHeading "Asylum: Finance" ; parl:houseId "2" ; parl:legislature ; parl:questionText "To ask Her Majesty’s Government whether they intend to review the azure payment card for asylum seekers as a result of the new report by the British Red Cross on the humanitarian cost of the card." ; parl:registeredInterest false ; parl:tablingMember ; parl:tablingMemberPrinted "Lord Roberts of Llandudno" ; parl:uin "HL2223" ; dcterms:date "2014-10-20"^^xsd:dateTime . parl:answerText "

The Azure card is issued to destitute failed asylum seekers accommodated under section 4 of the Immigration and Asylum Act 1999 because they are temporarily unable to leave the United Kingdom. The card can be used at most of the main supermarket chains to purchase food and other essential items. The performance of the card is kept under regular review but the Government is satisfied that it is an effective way of ensuring that recipients are able to meet their essential living needs and are not left destitute.

The Government therefore has no plans to abolish the card or change legislation to allow people supported under section 4 to receive cash instead.

The total administrative costs of the card scheme since it was introduced in 2009 are approximately £1,515,000. Estimated administrative costs for the current financial year are £200,000.

The Government published its response to the House of Commons Home Affairs Committee report about asylum procedures in December 2013 (cm 8769). A response to the Committee’s views on section 4 support was set out on page 18-19.

" ; parl:answeringMember ; parl:answeringMemberPrinted "Lord Bates" ; parl:dateOfAnswer "2014-10-28"^^xsd:dateTime ; parl:groupedQuestionUIN "HL2279" , "HL2277" , "HL2281" , "HL2278" ; parl:isMinisterialCorrection false ; parl:questionFirstAnswered "2014-10-28T15:17:56.0405779Z"^^xsd:dateTime . parl:answer ; parl:answeringDeptId "1" ; parl:answeringDeptPrinted "Home Office" ; parl:answeringDeptShortName "Home Office" ; parl:answeringDeptSortName "Home Office" ; parl:hansardHeading "Asylum: Appeals" ; parl:houseId "2" ; parl:legislature ; parl:questionText "To ask Her Majesty’s Government how many Home Office asylum decisions were appealed against in 2005, 2008, 2011 and 2013; and what percentage of the total applications that represents." ; parl:registeredInterest false ; parl:tablingMember ; parl:tablingMemberPrinted "Lord Roberts of Llandudno" ; parl:uin "HL2226" ; dcterms:date "2014-10-20"^^xsd:dateTime . parl:answer ; parl:answeringDeptId "1" ; parl:answeringDeptPrinted "Home Office" ; parl:answeringDeptShortName "Home Office" ; parl:answeringDeptSortName "Home Office" ; parl:hansardHeading "Asylum: Finance" ; parl:houseId "2" ; parl:legislature ; parl:questionText "To ask Her Majesty’s Government how much they have spent on administering the Azure card system since its inception." ; parl:registeredInterest false ; parl:tablingMember ; parl:tablingMemberPrinted "Lord Roberts of Llandudno" ; parl:uin "HL2279" ; dcterms:date "2014-10-21"^^xsd:dateTime . skos:prefLabel "House of Lords" . parl:answerText "

They have access to NHS services free of charge while their asylum claims are under consideration.

" ; parl:answeringMember ; parl:answeringMemberPrinted "Lord Bates" ; parl:dateOfAnswer "2014-10-30"^^xsd:dateTime ; parl:isMinisterialCorrection false ; parl:questionFirstAnswered "2014-10-30T16:19:48.7821378Z"^^xsd:dateTime . parl:answer ; parl:answeringDeptId "1" ; parl:answeringDeptPrinted "Home Office" ; parl:answeringDeptShortName "Home Office" ; parl:answeringDeptSortName "Home Office" ; parl:hansardHeading "Asylum: Appeals" ; parl:houseId "2" ; parl:legislature ; parl:questionText "To ask Her Majesty’s Government how many Home Office asylum decisions were appealed against in 2005, 2008, 2011 and 2013; and what percentage of those appeals were successful." ; parl:registeredInterest false ; parl:tablingMember ; parl:tablingMemberPrinted "Lord Roberts of Llandudno" ; parl:uin "HL2225" ; dcterms:date "2014-10-20"^^xsd:dateTime . parl:answerText "

The Azure card is issued to destitute failed asylum seekers accommodated under section 4 of the Immigration and Asylum Act 1999 because they are temporarily unable to leave the United Kingdom. The card can be used at most of the main supermarket chains to purchase food and other essential items. The performance of the card is kept under regular review but the Government is satisfied that it is an effective way of ensuring that recipients are able to meet their essential living needs and are not left destitute.

The Government therefore has no plans to abolish the card or change legislation to allow people supported under section 4 to receive cash instead.

The total administrative costs of the card scheme since it was introduced in 2009 are approximately £1,515,000. Estimated administrative costs for the current financial year are £200,000.

The Government published its response to the House of Commons Home Affairs Committee report about asylum procedures in December 2013 (cm 8769). A response to the Committee’s views on section 4 support was set out on page 18-19.

" ; parl:answeringMember ; parl:answeringMemberPrinted "Lord Bates" ; parl:dateOfAnswer "2014-10-28"^^xsd:dateTime ; parl:groupedQuestionUIN "HL2281" , "HL2278" , "HL2280" , "HL2277" ; parl:isMinisterialCorrection false ; parl:questionFirstAnswered "2014-10-28T15:17:55.7481075Z"^^xsd:dateTime . rdfs:label "Biography information for Lord Bates" . parl:answer ; parl:answeringDeptId "1" ; parl:answeringDeptPrinted "Home Office" ; parl:answeringDeptShortName "Home Office" ; parl:answeringDeptSortName "Home Office" ; parl:hansardHeading "Asylum: Finance" ; parl:houseId "2" ; parl:legislature ; parl:questionText "To ask Her Majesty’s Government what plans they have to abolish the Azure payment card and amend legislation to enable the provision of cash support for all refused asylum seekers until they are either given status in the United Kingdom or return to their country of origin." ; parl:registeredInterest false ; parl:tablingMember ; parl:tablingMemberPrinted "Lord Roberts of Llandudno" ; parl:uin "HL2278" ; dcterms:date "2014-10-21"^^xsd:dateTime . parl:answerText "

There is no reason why any asylum seekers should be left without support on reaching the age of 18. Unaccompanied asylum seeking children are looked after by local authorities and most will continue to be supported in this way after the age of 18 under leaving care legislation while they remain in the UK.

Any asylum seeker that does not have an entitlement to leaving care support would be eligible to support from the Home Office under the provisions of section 95 of the Immigration and Asylum Act 1999 if they were destitute.

" ; parl:answeringMember ; parl:answeringMemberPrinted "Lord Bates" ; parl:dateOfAnswer "2014-10-27"^^xsd:dateTime ; parl:isMinisterialCorrection false ; parl:questionFirstAnswered "2014-10-27T12:40:35.435951Z"^^xsd:dateTime . parl:answerText "

The Azure card is issued to destitute failed asylum seekers accommodated under section 4 of the Immigration and Asylum Act 1999 because they are temporarily unable to leave the United Kingdom. The card can be used at most of the main supermarket chains to purchase food and other essential items. The performance of the card is kept under regular review but the Government is satisfied that it is an effective way of ensuring that recipients are able to meet their essential living needs and are not left destitute.

The Government therefore has no plans to abolish the card or change legislation to allow people supported under section 4 to receive cash instead.

The total administrative costs of the card scheme since it was introduced in 2009 are approximately £1,515,000. Estimated administrative costs for the current financial year are £200,000.

The Government published its response to the House of Commons Home Affairs Committee report about asylum procedures in December 2013 (cm 8769). A response to the Committee’s views on section 4 support was set out on page 18-19.

" ; parl:answeringMember ; parl:answeringMemberPrinted "Lord Bates" ; parl:dateOfAnswer "2014-10-28"^^xsd:dateTime ; parl:groupedQuestionUIN "HL2279" , "HL2281" , "HL2280" , "HL2277" ; parl:isMinisterialCorrection false ; parl:questionFirstAnswered "2014-10-28T15:17:55.3415588Z"^^xsd:dateTime . parl:answer ; parl:answeringDeptId "1" ; parl:answeringDeptPrinted "Home Office" ; parl:answeringDeptShortName "Home Office" ; parl:answeringDeptSortName "Home Office" ; parl:hansardHeading "Asylum: Finance" ; parl:houseId "2" ; parl:legislature ; parl:questionText "To ask Her Majesty’s Government whether they have assessed the effectiveness of the combination of the Azure payment card and support under section 4 of the Immigration and Asylum Act 1999 in enabling refused asylum seekers to meet their basic needs." ; parl:registeredInterest false ; parl:tablingMember ; parl:tablingMemberPrinted "Lord Roberts of Llandudno" ; parl:uin "HL2277" ; dcterms:date "2014-10-21"^^xsd:dateTime . parl:answerText "

The annual number of asylum appeals lodged and the percentage of asylum appeals determined that were successful for 2005 and 2008 are shown in the table attached.

Data for asylum applications, asylum appeals lodged and the percentage of asylum appeals determined that were successful for 2011 and 2013 is available in published data and can be found in the links listed in the bullets below:

• Data for asylum applications can be found in table ‘as 01’ of the ‘Asylum data tables immigration statistics April to June 2014 volume 1’ is available at: https://www.gov.uk/government/statistics/immigration-statistics-april-to-june-2014-data-tables.

• Data for asylum appeals lodged and % of appeals allowed is available at: https://www.gov.uk/government/collections/tribunals-statistics

The volumes listed in the table and links above are not necessarily the same cohort of cases. As a result we are unable to provide data on the percentage of asylum applications in the years requested that resulted in an appeal.

Table showing asylum appeals lodged and percentage of asylum appeals determined that were successful.

2005[1][2][3]

2008

Asylum Appeals lodged

24,891

11,008

Appeals determined by the IAA/AIT

32,611

10,057

% Asylum appeals allowed (of those determined)[4]

18%

25%

[1] Appeals were dealt with by the Immigration Appellate Authority (IAA) until April 2005, by the Asylum and Immigration Tribunal (AIT) from Apr 2005 to Feb 2010, and since then by the First-tier Tribunal Immigration and Asylum Chamber.

[2] 2005 lodgement figures exclude appeals dismissed at the Preliminary Issue stage (out of time or invalid). HMCTS now include this category of appeal in Official Statistics data, from 1st April 2007.

[3] The 2005 asylum appeals lodged figure may not match figures previously in the public domain due to differing dates of extraction from the case management database. See link to archive http://webarchive.nationalarchives.gov.uk/20110206074952/http://www.tribunals.gov.uk/ImmigrationAsylum/

[4] "determined" means decided by a judge and excludes withdrawn appeals.

" ; parl:answeringMember ; parl:answeringMemberPrinted "Lord Bates" ; parl:dateOfAnswer "2014-11-05"^^xsd:dateTime ; parl:groupedQuestionUIN "HL2225" ; parl:isMinisterialCorrection false ; parl:questionFirstAnswered "2014-11-05T14:33:12.0548199Z"^^xsd:dateTime . parl:answerText "

The Azure card is issued to destitute failed asylum seekers accommodated under section 4 of the Immigration and Asylum Act 1999 because they are temporarily unable to leave the United Kingdom. The card can be used at most of the main supermarket chains to purchase food and other essential items. The performance of the card is kept under regular review but the Government is satisfied that it is an effective way of ensuring that recipients are able to meet their essential living needs and are not left destitute.

The Government therefore has no plans to abolish the card or change legislation to allow people supported under section 4 to receive cash instead.

The total administrative costs of the card scheme since it was introduced in 2009 are approximately £1,515,000. Estimated administrative costs for the current financial year are £200,000.

The Government published its response to the House of Commons Home Affairs Committee report about asylum procedures in December 2013 (cm 8769). A response to the Committee’s views on section 4 support was set out on page 18-19.

" ; parl:answeringMember ; parl:answeringMemberPrinted "Lord Bates" ; parl:dateOfAnswer "2014-10-28"^^xsd:dateTime ; parl:groupedQuestionUIN "HL2281" , "HL2280" , "HL2279" , "HL2278" ; parl:isMinisterialCorrection false ; parl:questionFirstAnswered "2014-10-28T15:17:54.1853177Z"^^xsd:dateTime . a api:Page ; "10"^^xsd:long ; "1"^^xsd:long ; "151"^^xsd:long ; dcterms:isPartOf ; api:definition ; api:extendedMetadataVersion ; api:items ( ) ; api:page "0"^^xsd:long ; ; . a api:ListEndpoint ; dcterms:hasPart ; api:definition .