Labour MPs urge UK to protect Hong Kong BN(O) migrants from residency reforms



A group of Labour Party MPs have urged the British government to ensure changes to permanent residency requirements do not undermine support for Hongkongers on a bespoke visa pathway or others admitted on humanitarian grounds.

They have asked the Home Office to consider exempting the BN(O) routes from the governmentโ€™s proposed overhaul of the wider settlement system as part of four requests to extend support for Hongkongers under the scheme.

James Naish and 33 of his Labour colleagues sent a letter to migration and citizenship minister Mike Tapp on Wednesday during an ongoing 12-week consultation period on the UK governmentโ€™s proposed settlement system overhaul, announced last month.

As part of the planned changes, BN(O) visa holders will face stricter English-language requirements and higher income thresholds for permanent residence applications, although they will be exempt from a proposal to extend the qualifying period from five to 10 years.

The MPs said in the letter that they had โ€œsignificant concernsโ€ about proposals to change the minimum mandatory requirements for indefinite leave to remain, particularly if applied rigidly and retroactively to those already in the United Kingdom part-way through their five-year pathway.

โ€œThe BN(O) visa was created with cross-party support to offer a safe route for Hongkongers following the crackdown on civil liberties in Hong Kong,โ€ Naish wrote in a social media post accompanying the joint letter.

โ€œMany families made life-changing decisions based on the clear promise of a path to settlement after five years.โ€

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