More than 1,000 Afghans who fled Taliban to travel to UK ‘to be made homeless in December’

The first flight carrying Afghan refugees from Pakistan to the UK arrived on Friday. (File/AFP)
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Updated 29 October 2023
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More than 1,000 Afghans who fled Taliban to travel to UK ‘to be made homeless in December’

  • Council leaders appealed for additional funding to help accommodate Afghans and Ukrainians, but none was offered

LONDON: More than 1,000 Afghans who fled the Taliban for a new life in the UK are facing the threat of being made homeless after the Home Office imposed a new deadline of Dec. 15 to evict them from hotels, The Guardian reported.

The Local Government Association says some Afghans who served UK interests in Afghanistan could already be sleeping on the streets after the government forced them out of hotels more than two years after they were evacuated from Kabul.

Separate new data shows that more than 5,200 Ukrainian families are currently receiving “homelessness support,” with 4,350 identified as homeless after relationships with UK families with whom they were residing “broke down.”

Council leaders appealed to Immigration Minister Robert Jenrick on Thursday for additional funding to help accommodate Afghans and Ukrainians, but none was offered.

LGA Chairman Shaun Davies told The Guardian: “Councils are becoming increasingly concerned over the numbers of Afghan and Ukrainian families presenting as homeless, which is likely to dramatically increase when Home Office accommodation is withdrawn as a result of the current clearance of the asylum backlog.”

According to an internal LGA briefing note on the plight of Afghan refugees who arrived in the UK in 2021: “Councils remain hugely concerned that some families — some of whom are particularly vulnerable and will have ongoing medical conditions — may have to end up presenting as homeless, particularly given the lack of available housing stock for larger and multi-generational families.”

The crisis has been exacerbated by the arrival of Afghans who had been waiting for relocation in Pakistan.

The refugees are thought to have been accommodated in former Ministry of Defence buildings. However, councils suspect some will have to be resettled in hotels that the government intends on keeping free of asylum-seekers.

The first flight carrying Afghan refugees from Pakistan to the UK arrived on Friday. Another 3,200 in Pakistan are awaiting UK visas after working for the British government or the army.

The LGA briefing note added: “Afghanistan households who were not included as part of the 2021 evacuation to the UK but are entitled to come as part of the existing resettlement schemes — potentially several thousand more people — are also likely to arrive in the coming weeks.”

Veterans’ Affairs Minister Johnny Mercer said in August that if Afghans who worked for the UK government ended up homeless, he would have failed.

A government spokesperson told the Guardian: “The UK made an ambitious and generous commitment to the people of Afghanistan and, so far, we have brought around 24,600 people to safety.

“We do not recognize the Local Government Association figures as the vast majority of those still in interim accommodation have been pre-matched to settled accommodation.”
 


Trump’s new tariffs shift focus to balance of payments; economists see no crisis

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Trump’s new tariffs shift focus to balance of payments; economists see no crisis

President Donald Trump’s temporary 15 percent tariffs to replace those struck down by the US Supreme Court are meant to resolve a problem that many economists say ​does not exist: a US balance of payments crisis, making them potentially vulnerable to new legal challenges.
Hours after the high court on Friday struck down a huge swath of tariffs Trump had imposed under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act, the president announced the new duties under Section 122 of the Trade Act of 1974 — a never-used statute that even his own legal team dismissed as irrelevant months ago.
Collections of the new 15 percent tariffs began at midnight on Tuesday as IEEPA tariff collections of 10 percent to 50 percent halted.
The Section 122 law allows the president to impose duties of up to 15 percent for up to 150 days on any and all countries to address “large and serious” balance-of-payments deficits and “fundamental international payments problems.”
Trump’s tariff order argued that a serious balance of payments deficit existed in the form of a $1.2 trillion annual US goods trade ‌deficit and a current ‌account deficit of 4 percent of GDP and a reversal of the US primary income surplus.
Some ​economists, ‌including ⁠former International ​Monetary Fund ⁠First Deputy Managing Director Gita Gopinath, disagreed with the Trump administration’s alarm.
“We can all agree that the US is not facing a balance of payment crisis, which is when countries experience an exorbitant increase in international borrowing costs and lose access to financial markets,” Gopinath told Reuters.
Gopinath rejected the White House’s claim that a negative balance on the US primary income for the first time since 1960 was evidence of a large and serious balance of payment problem.
She attributed the negative balance to a large increase in foreign purchases of US equities and risky assets over the past decade, which outperformed foreign equities over this period.
Mark Sobel, a former US Treasury and IMF official, said that balance of payments crises are more associated with countries that have ⁠fixed exchange rates, and noted that the floating-rate dollar has been steady, the 10-year Treasury yield fairly ‌stable, with US stocks performing well.
Josh Lipsky, chair of international economics at the Atlantic Council ‌think tank, agreed, noting that a balance of payments crisis occurred when a country ​could not pay for what it was importing or was unable to ‌service foreign debt. That was fundamentally different from a trade deficit, he added.
Brad Setser, a currency and trade expert at the ‌Council on Foreign Relations who served as a senior adviser to the US Trade Representative in the Biden administration, took a somewhat contrarian view, arguing in lengthy X posts on Sunday that the Trump administration may have a reasonable case that there is a “large and serious” balance of payments deficit.
He noted that the current account deficit was far higher than when then-president Richard Nixon erected tariffs in 1971 to address a balance of payments crisis, and the US net international investment ‌position is much worse. This “gives the administration a real argument,” in favor of its tariffs, Setser wrote.
The White House, US Treasury and US Trade Representative did not immediately respond to requests for comment about ⁠the use of Section 122.

WRONG STATUTE ⁠FOR THE JOB
Despite the Trump administration’s new focus on balance of payments, the Justice Department had previously argued that Section 122 was the wrong statute to handle a national emergency over the trade deficit.
In court filings in its defense of IEEPA tariffs, the Justice Department said Section 122 would not have “any obvious application here, where the concerns the president identified in declaring an emergency arise from trade deficits, which are conceptually distinct from balance-of-payments deficits.”
Neal Katyal, who argued at the Supreme Court on behalf of plaintiffs challenging the IEEPA tariffs, told CNBC that the Trump administration’s stance against the use of Section 122 for a trade deficit will make those tariffs vulnerable to litigation.
“I’m not sure it will necessarily even need to get to the Supreme Court, but if the president adheres to this plan of using a statute that his own Justice Department has said he can’t use, yeah, I think that’s a pretty easy thing to litigate,” Katyal said.
It is unclear who might take the lead in challenging the Section 122 tariffs.
Sara Albrecht, chair of the Liberty Justice Center, a nonprofit, public-interest law firm representing several small businesses that challenged the IEEPA ​tariffs, said the group would closely monitor any new statutes ​being invoked.
Albrecht did not reveal any future litigation strategy, adding: “Our immediate focus is simple: making sure the refund process begins and that checks start flowing to the American businesses that paid those unconstitutional duties.”
In its ruling, the Supreme Court did not give instructions regarding refunds, instead remanding the case to a lower ​trade court to determine next steps.