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Once again, the UK leads the world....

... but only in heartlessness. This is the reality:A Ukrainian woman and her 15-year-old diabetic daughter say they are feeling increasingly distraught after escaping the conflict in Ukraine only to be blocked from a visa the UK government announced on Sunday evening for which they are eligible.Yakiv Voloshchuk, 60, a British citizen, rescued his wife, Oksana Voloshchuk, 41 and their daughter, Veronika Voloshchuk, from Poland on 26 February.He drove from his home in London to the Polish border and waited for them to get across Ukraine’s border with Poland. He then did a return 24-hour journey by road across Europe before reaching Paris on Sunday where he hoped he would get the green light from British officials to bring his wife and daughter on the last leg of the journey to the UK.The family hoped it would be straightforward to reach the UK, especially after the publication of new Home Office guidance giving permission for some immediate family members of British citizens to apply free of charge to join their loved ones in the UK.But when Oksana and Veronika tried to apply for the new visa online they were blocked from proceeding unless they paid thousands of pounds, even though the application is supposed to be free.“We just don’t know what to do,” Voloshchuk told the Guardian on Monday morning. “My wife’s bank account in Ukraine is frozen. We have booked into a hotel in Paris for a couple of days but I want to bring my family back to the UK to my home in London.“We are getting very worried about my daughter because she is type 1 diabetic and is running out of insulin. We also don’t have a lot of money for food. She needs to eat regularly.”Perhaps they should volunteer as fruit pickers?

Richard Carter ● 1203d21 Comments

It seems, though, that this is a characteristically misleading statement: from a post elsewhere this is what is actually proposed:Johnson has announced that Ukrainian refugees can come to the UK if they have immediate family here, as the conflict in Ukraine enters its fifth day. Explosions were heard across Ukraine’s cities last night, and President Volodymyr Zelensky has said that the next 24 hours will be crucial for his country. “Any person settled in the UK will be able to bring their Ukrainian immediate family members to join them here,” No 10 said last night. “This will benefit many thousands of people who at this moment are making desperate choices about their future.” The announcement comes after sustained pressure on the UK government to accept more people fleeing Ukraine, ahead of a refugee crisis that is expected to involve millions of people.But the small print reveals that these provisions will only apply to married and long-term couples and children under 18 seeking to be reunited with their parents. Applicants will still be subject to English language requirements and a minimum income requirement, with a government caveat that: “Given the current circumstances, if somebody does not meet these requirements, UKVI [Visas and Immigration] will consider an alternative grant of leave to come to the UK.” But there is no guarantee that, after consideration, a visa will be given to those who fall short of one of these requirements, even if they fall into the limited category of eligible family members.The Labour Party has described the narrowness of these changes to visa requirements as “shameful”, while the Liberal Democrats have said that: "Boris Johnson needs to follow the lead of our European neighbours and set up a simple, rapid scheme to resettle Ukrainian refugees in the UK. Anything less would be a failure of moral leadership and leave thousands at risk." The EU agreed unanimously last night that all member countries will take in Ukrainian refugees for up to three years without asking them to first apply for asylum.

Richard Carter ● 1202d