Churches should not allow asylum seekers to exploit system, says Cleverly

James Cleverly says he met with senior church leaders to explain a conversion to Christianity was not a guarantee of asylum
James Cleverly says he met with senior church leaders to explain a conversion to Christianity was not a guarantee of asylum - MARIA UNGER/UK PARLIAMENT

James Cleverly has warned churches should not allow asylum seekers to exploit the system by converting to Christianity.

In a message to church leaders at Easter, the Home Secretary said there is a “real difference” between welcoming a new member of the congregation and “vouching for a person in an asylum tribunal”.

His comments came after Abdul Ezedi, the Clapham attack suspect, was granted asylum by a judge who accepted he had converted to Christianity despite concerns the convicted sex offender was lying.

Ezedi’s body was pulled from the River Thames last month following a major manhunt after he was suspected of attacking his former partner and her children, aged eight and three, with an alkali substance in Clapham, south London, in January.

Writing in the Sun on Sunday, Mr Cleverly said: “Even the church has said they share our mission to stop the boats.

“We have met with the senior church leaders to explain Christian conversion is no guarantee of asylum being granted and we’ve stressed there is a real difference between welcoming new members to a flock and vouching for a person in an asylum tribunal.”

He added: “Allowing people to exploit the system risks detracting from the invaluable work Christians and the church do every day for our society – today of all days.”

‘No evidence’ of industrial-scale migrant baptisms

Details of the Ezedi case were only revealed following media applications for immigration tribunal court papers. Mr Cleverly indicated he backed greater transparency over asylum decisions.

“We were right to reject the asylum claims of the Clapham alkali attacker, twice, and believe a light shone on independent asylum tribunal decisions is needed,” he said.

The Archbishop of Canterbury has previously said there is “no evidence” to support claims the Church of England is “subverting the asylum system” by allowing spurious conversions to Christianity.

The church has been accused in recent months of allowing “industrial-scale” baptisms of migrants to assist with their asylum claims, allowing them to claim they would be persecuted in their home country because they are now Christians.

Earlier this month, the Most Rev Justin Welby told Times Radio he had seen “no evidence” of this occurring, only “assertions”.

He added: “We wrote to the Home Office and they said they had no evidence to show us.”

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