UK

‘Thousands’ of Ukraine refugees forced into overcrowded homes as UK system branded ‘dysfunctional disaster’

Thousands of Ukrainians seeking refuge in the UK have been forced to live in overcrowded accommodation, with whole families sharing single rooms, charities have warned.

Many of the refugees who have come to Britain to join relatives after fleeing the war are affected, organisations working to help them say, with hundreds having registered as homeless due to poor living conditions.

It comes amid claims the Home Office’s Ukraine family scheme is “half-baked”, with a senior MP branding the situation a “dysfunctional disaster” – while The Independent’s Refugees Welcome campaign calling for the government to go further and faster to help Ukrainians fleeing their country.

Charities warn the majority of those arriving under the route are experiencing overcrowding because their relatives in the UK do not have spare rooms and no checks are carried out on these properties pre-arrival.

A survey carried out by the Greater London Authority of nine charities in the capital found that of 83 Ukrainian clients on the family scheme seeking support, more than half (58 per cent) were in unsuitable accommodation and nearly one in five (17 per cent) were at immediate risk of homelessness.

Meanwhile the government is refusing to publish national data it holds on the number of Ukrainians presenting to councils as homeless.

Andrei Savitski, service provider at the Work Rights Centre, said more than half of the Ukrainian refugees the charity supports are in overcrowded conditions, and that there would be thousands nationally given family sponsors often live in housing that is “already only just about suitable”.

He described one case of a Ukrainian family of five, with one disabled child, all living in one sublet bedroom in Nottinghamshire after the wife and children arrived at the start of April to join the husband, who was already living in precarious conditions as a night shift delivery driver.

“They’ve approached the council and said they need housing. Someone from the council has come to the flat and seen the conditions and said it’s not suitable, but their appointments for new housing have been postponed a number of times and they’re still there,” he said.

Government data shows that 16,000 have arrived under the Ukraine Family scheme, which allows refugees to join UK-based relatives, while 11,100 have arrived under the Homes for Ukraine scheme – a separate route which allows refugees to live with volunteer hosts in the UK.

Local authorities are given £10,500 in central government funding for each refugee under the Homes for Ukraine scheme, but receive no money for those arriving under the family route.

Calls are mounting for councils to be given funding to support those arriving under the family scheme, and for the government to allow refugees on this scheme to be able to switch to the Homes for Ukraine route.

Tatiana Miller, 44, who lives Wokingham, said her mother, sister and her sister’s two children arrived under the family route in mid-April. But they returned to Poland – where they had fled after the invasion – two weeks later because the living conditions were too overcrowded in the UK.

“We made it work for a short period of time. We did what we could, but on arrival it became obvious that it wasn’t sustainable. They went back to Poland even though they know no one there,” she told The Independent.

“The family scheme is unfair. We got no financial support, as sponsors do under the other scheme. The government seems to be on another planet. There is a desire to help, but they give with one hand and take away with the other. It’s half-baked. It’s heartless and not thought through.”

Tatiana Miller’s mother (left), nephews (middle and bottom right) and sister came to join her and her daughters (also pictured) under the family scheme but have had to return to Poland because the living conditions were too crowded

Svitlana Opanasenko, a volunteer at Ukraine social Club, said that of the approximately 200 households on the family scheme that the charity has supported since the start of March, between 90-95 per cent have been living in overcrowded conditions.

She said that at least a dozen of the families they support had been forced to move out of their relatives’ home and register as homeless with the local council because the situation was unsustainable, or because landlords had ordered them to leave due to the overcrowding.

“The families are desperate to get their relatives out of Ukraine, and they’re not looking at the square footage of their apartments. They just try to bring everyone in. People have nowhere else to go,” she said.

Ms Opanasenko added that refugees were also struggling to access financial support and were having to rely on food banks, adding: “We refer most of them for universal credit, but it takes time. You need to register, prove the address, get a bank card, then wait a month.

Ukranians of all ages have left the country during Putin’s invasion

Hundreds of Ukrainian refugees in the UK have registered as homeless due to poor living conditions

Xural.com

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