The UK is called upon to do more for Ukrainian refugees

The British government has been criticized for its lack of generosity in welcoming Ukrainians fleeing the country after the Russian invasion, showing it to be more measured than its European neighbors.

The British Prime Minister Boris Johnson announced yesterday, Sunday, that the British could bring to the United Kingdom members of their immediate family living in Ukraine, a measure that could benefit “thousands of people”, according to his services.

Johnson vowed that Britain would be “very generous to the Ukrainians” in a bid to calm the war’s weekend’s immigration minister, Kevin Foster.

He stressed on Twitter that Ukrainians could be accepted as seasonal workers, causing outrage. A sketch published by the Times today shows the Interior Minister asking a family of Ukrainians trapped in a burning building if they are “willing to pick fruit” in exchange for a ladder to save her.

Criticism of Boris Johnson, who also announced yesterday that he would deliver νέα 40 million (approximately € 48 million) in new humanitarian aid to Ukraine, highlighted the difference between his commitments and those of the European Union, which supports the provide temporary protection for Ukrainians, which will allow them to stay and work in the EU for up to three years.

Labor MP Yvette Cooper said it was a “shame” that the government had decided to accept only members of the immediate families of Ukrainians who had settled in Britain.

At the same time, Scottish Prime Minister Nicholas Sturgeon called on the same social networking site to “lift visa requirements for all Ukrainians seeking entry into Britain, as other countries do.”

Some 368,000 refugees have fled Ukraine since the Russian-led invasion began on Thursday, most of them entering Polish territory, and their numbers “continue to rise”, according to the UN and Polish authorities.

In an article in The Guardian, Enver Solomon, who heads the refugee union The Refugee Council, called for a “much more urgent” response that “shows more compassion from the prime minister”.

“I think we have a chance to be generous,” Tom Taggedat, chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, told the BBC.

Conservative MP Boris Johnson said it was “possible” for Britain to eventually follow the European Union line and go further in welcoming Ukrainian refugees.

SOURCE: AMPE

Source: Capital

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