Sheffield Free Asylum Information / Refugee Help and Advice In Sheffield
Welcome to the ArashMoto Iranian Asylum Team:
Asylum Seekers - individuals awaiting a decision by the Home Office as to whether they can remain in the UK
- Refugees - individuals who have been granted permission to stay in the UK
- We also have a role in relation to European Union Accession State nationals
Our services are:
- Arranging accommodation and support for asylum seekers
- Supporting newly granted refugees to settle in the City (SUNRISE service)
- Working with partners to implement the New Lives Refugee Integration Strategy
- Co-ordination of the Gateway Protection Programme which enables vulnerable refugees to be resettled in the City
- Promoting awareness of the needs of asylum seekers and refugees
- Co-ordinating the City Council response to European Union Accession State nationals
The Asylum Team is funded by the Home Office:
- a contract for arranging accommodation and support for asylum seekers. This contract is in partnership with nine other local authorities in the region through the Yorkshire and Humberside Public Sector Group. The national dispersal system means that asylum seekers applying for accommodation may be required to move from London and the south east to northern cities, including Sheffield. The location and quality of the accommodation is on a no-choice basis for dispersed individuals. The Asylum Team procures its accommodation through Sheffield Homes, registered social landlords and private landlords.
- a contract for supporting newly granted refugees to settle in the city - through a Home Office pilot service called SUNRISE that offers 12 months' case work support to access a range of services. This contract is in partnership with Leeds City Council, the Refugee Council and Refugee Support.
The Asylum Team includes the following team members:
Accommodation and support officers
The key managerial contacts are:
Belinda Gallup, Programme Manager
Katie Drake, Assistant Manager - Operations
Owen McDowell, Assistant Manager - Strategy and Communications
The Asylum Social Work Team is based within the Children's and Young People's Directorate. It provides services for:
- unaccompanied asylum seeker children
- families from abroad
To contact the Asylum Social Work team
please telephone 0114 2734520
For more information please follow the links below:
How To Contact us:
Clients can access our services for the following:
- To request a service
- For Advice
- To ask a question
- To make a comment, complaint or suggestion
There are a number of different ways you can contact us:
- In person by using our City Centre First Point Service at Howden House. Our opening times are 08.30 to 17.30, Monday to Friday.
- By telephone, by calling 0114 2736612 between 08.30 and 17.30 Monday to Friday.
- By textphone, to 0114 273 5028. This service is for text phone users only. Text phone users can also contact us via RND Typetalk.
- By email, to asylum@sheffield.gov.uk. Responses are made within 24 hours, between 08.30 to 17.30 Monday to Friday.
- By post. Our address is:
Asylum Team
Sheffield City Council
Floor 2, Howden House
1 Union StreetSheffield
S1 2SH
You can also contact Sheffield City Council online with any comments, complaints or feedback.
Asylum Seekers and Refugees in Sheffield:
Who is an asylum seeker?
Anyone at all is allowed to ask for protection in another country that has signed up to the Refugee Convention if he or she is at risk of being persecuted in his or her home country. An asylum seeker is someone who has arrived in the UK and made an application for asylum to the UK authorities and is waiting for a decision on whether this will be granted
Who is a refugee?
A refugee is someone who has had their asylum application thoroughly investigated, and who has proven that they have ‘a well-founded fear of being persecuted for reasons of race, religion, membership of a particular social group, or political opinion’ in their homeland and are afraid to return to that country. They are therefore entitled to remain in the UK and obtain work.
Where do they come from?
An asylum seeker cannot claim asylum if he or she is not on UK soil. Sheffield accepts a small number of vulnerable refugees under the international Gateway protection programme. The programme resettles vulnerable people from countries where there is little opportunity for people to make their own way to a safe country. Since 2004 people from Liberia in West Africa and from Burma in south-east Asia have come to live in the city under the programme. They are not asylum seekers, as they are granted refugee status on arrival in the UK. They can seek work, claim benefits and have most of the rights as the rest of the resident population. Most asylum seekers in Sheffield now come from the following five countries: Iraq, Eritrea, Iran, the Democratic republic of Congo and Zimbabwe (April 2007 figures). Nationally the major home countries of asylum seekers are Eritrea, Afghanistan and Iran.
Why do they come to the UK?
Most asylum seekers do not come here – they stay in the first safe country they reach or are internally displaced within their own country. The vast majority of refugees can be found in the developing world, accounting for 72% of the world’s estimated 12 million refugees between 1992 and 2001. Research shows that most asylum seekers who do come to the UK have little choice in the matter – they are dependent on whoever arranges their escape. For those who do have a choice, the main reasons are: some knowledge of English, having relatives or friends living in the country and a belief that the UK is a safe, tolerant and democratic society.
Are asylum seekers able to work or claim high levels of benefits?
Asylum seekers do not have the right to work while their cases are being assessed. They can apply for permission to work from the Home Office but this is not an entitlement. The Home Office funds accommodation and cash support for asylum seekers with little or no money. On average the cash level of this support is 70 per cent of Income support benefits.
Do asylum seekers receive free televisions, cars and mobile telephones?
No. This is just a myth and is completely untrue. Asylum seekers only receive basic living necessities from the state. If asylum seekers do have mobile phones, it will be because they have saved up to pay for them – mobile ‘phones are often the only means of communication asylum seekers have with their homeland, their solicitors or immigration authorities.
Can they jump the housing queue ahead of local people?
No. Councils receive extra funding from the government to fund housing available for asylum seekers. Asylum seekers do not have the right to apply for social housing. Many are housed in privately rented accommodation, with funding from the Home Office. Refugees (people who are given permission to remain in the UK) can apply for council housing but are subject to the same criteria for allocation as the rest of the population.
How many asylum seekers are here?
The number of asylum seekers being supported in Sheffield is a small proportion of the population. The number of asylum seekers being supported in Sheffield is a small proportion of the total population, and has been reducing steadily in the last two years. In Sheffield asylum seekers make up approximately 0.3% of the total population, which amounts to around 1500 individuals including dependent children. (April 2007)
How long are they here for?
Asylum seekers can wait between a few weeks and several months before they are given an initial decision on their asylum application. Many whose initial claims are refused may appeal against the decision - this can take up to a year to take place.
Do Council Tax payers foot the bill for the asylum support system?
No. Central government meets the costs of looking after asylum seekers who are waiting for a decision on their asylum application.
Why do many refused asylum seekers remain in the UK?
The Immigration Service removes many refused asylum seekers forcibly. Others return home on a voluntary basis. Others may remain because, although their asylum claim has been refused, they are genuinely frightened of returning home. The Home Office does offer accommodation and voucher support (not cash) to refused asylum seekers who meet certain criteria. But those who do not take up or are refused this support may become homeless and destitute. Some may work illegally for very low wages and be at risk of exploitation.
Useful Links:
- Our Libraries Service web pages have a range of useful information and resources for asylum seekers and refugees
- Sheffield New Lives Refugee Integration strategy - provides background on asylum seekers and refugees in the City and identifies what the City Council and other organisations need to do to promote refugee settlement
- Home Office statistics and research site - lots of figures on asylum seekers in the UK
- Refugee Access is a Yorkshire and Humberside resource that provides a directory and a guide to services and information briefings and leaflets in a range of languages
- Local help yourself directory of voluntary, community and other services. Choose refugees and asylum seekers from the search box that selects particular categories of organsiations
- National Website of the Refugee Council that provides a wealth of information on the asylum process and support systems. Go to "information centre"
- Information centre for asylum and refugees - excellent website giving a massive range of information on asylum issues, very good for statistics
- HarpWeb.org is a website for health professionals supporting asylum seekers and refugees
Asylum seeker and refugee weekly drop-in centre:
If you are an asylum seeker or a refugee and would like:
- Information or advice to help with problems
- A place to meet other people
- A chance to practice your English with volunteers
Please come along to free drop-in sessions.
When are they?
Every Wednesday afternoon, 14.00-16.00.
Where are they?
Victoria Hall Methodist Church, on Chapel walk in Sheffield city centre (see this map for directions).
Who will be there?
All these agencies will have people there to help you with any problems you may have, or to answer your questions.
The Northern Refugee Centre - advice centre for asylum seekers and refugees
Red Cross - help tracing relatives in your home country
Refugee New Arrivals Project - advice on educational opportunities
For any confidential advice or help please do contact ArashMoto:
Do you need money?
Do you need house to leave?
Do you need counsellor?
Do you need a doctor?
Do you need solicitor?
Do you need advise?
Do you need information & advice?
Do you need someone to share your experience with?
Do you need someone to leave with?
Do you need someone to chat with?
Do you think someone abused you?
Do you need help to start your own business?
Do you want to open your own shop?
Do you need help to open bank account?
Do you need help to have a credit card?
Do you want to invite your family over here?
Do you need someone to look at your case?
Do you want to bring your love one’s here?
Do you have a criminal record and you need help?
Do you need driving licence?
Do you have any bad experience?
If any of the above reasons applied to you please do not hesitate to contact Arashmoto:
For more information please call us on:
Telephone: 08715721122
Fax: 0044 8715721122
Mobile: 07903777435
Email: info@asylumonline.co.uk
Email: Help@asylumonline.co.uk
Email: service@asylumonline.co.uk
Email: arash@asylumonline.co.uk
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More Links To Visit:
http://www.bia.homeoffice.gov.uk/asylum/
http://www.asylumsupport.info/nass.htm
http://www.homeoffice.gov.uk/rds/immigration-asylum-stats.html
http://www.opsi.gov.uk/Acts/acts2002/ukpga_20020041_en_1
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Asylum
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Asylum_(film)
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0348505/
http://www.asylum-entertainment.com/
http://www.asylumsupport.info/
http://ec.europa.eu/justice_home/fsj/asylum/fsj_asylum_intro_en.htm
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/7411706.stm
http://www.mdx.ac.uk/WWW/STUDY/4_13_Ta.htm
http://www.channel4.com/film/reviews/film.jsp?id=149203
http://www.unhcr.org/protect/3b8f5e3f13.html
http://www.asylum3d.co.uk/flash.asp
http://www.rogueevent.co.uk/asylum/index.html
http://www.rogueevent.co.uk/asylum08/
http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/immigration
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/?CMP=KNC-google_news&HBX_OU=50&HBX_PK=asylum
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