Home Office photograph

Home Office

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HeadquartersLondon
United Kingdom
FoundedUnited Kingdom
Subsidiary HM Passport Office
Officeholders Brandon Lewis
Dominic Raab
Priti Patel
Jurisdiction United Kingdom
England and Wales
PredecessorsNational School of Government
National Policing Improvement Agency
Date of Reg.
Date of Upd.
ID1364741
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About Home Office


The Home Office is a ministerial department of Her Majesty's Government of the United Kingdom, responsible for immigration, security and law and order. As such it is responsible for policing in England and Wales, fire and rescue services in England, and visas and immigration and the Security Service.

Chris Mason: Ministers in new bid to reduce immigration

Chris Mason: Ministers in new bid to reduce immigration
Dec 4,2023 7:11 am

... I am told relations between the Home Office and Downing Street are considerably improved since the sacking of former Home Secretary Suella Braverman...

Muriel McKay's daughter urges Met to let mother's killer find body

Muriel McKay's daughter urges Met to let mother's killer find body
Dec 2,2023 3:31 am

... She said the Home Office had delegated matters to the Met, who did not seem interested...

Pontins: Former holiday park giant shrinks further

Pontins: Former holiday park giant shrinks further
Dec 1,2023 12:21 pm

... Following speculation, the Home Office has clarified that the closed parks to house asylum seekers...

Belton House: Inquiry continues into country house assault death

Belton House: Inquiry continues into country house assault death
Dec 1,2023 8:41 am

... " Part of our investigation is around establishing the exact cause of death, which will be done following a formal Home Office post mortem examination at some point next week, " a force spokesperson said...

Asylum seekers: Home Office says more than 17,000 are missing

Asylum seekers: Home Office says more than 17,000 are missing
Nov 29,2023 10:01 am

...By Callum May & Suzanne LeighBBC NewsHome Office officials have admitted they do not know the whereabouts of more than 17,000 asylum seekers whose claims have been discontinued...

UK net migration in 2022 revised up to record 745,000

UK net migration in 2022 revised up to record 745,000
Nov 23,2023 9:21 am

... Home Office figures, also published on Thursday, showed hotel use reached a record high in September - despite a slight fall in the asylum backlog...

Households to be £1,900 poorer, says think tank

Households to be £1,900 poorer, says think tank
Nov 23,2023 4:21 am

... The chancellor managed to make these cuts at the expense of not raising public spending in line with the pace of general price rises, meaning departments such as justice, local government and the Home Office face a £17bn budget cut by 2027-28, it added...

Just Stop Oil: Rishi Sunak defends 'severe' jail sentences

Just Stop Oil: Rishi Sunak defends 'severe' jail sentences
Nov 21,2023 1:21 pm

... The Home Office said it had " responded" to the special rapporteur s letter...

Liverpool bomb: Church of England 'not aware' of link between asylum abuse and conversion

Nov 21,2023 8:41 am

The Church of England says it is not aware of any link between conversion and asylum system abuse after it emerged Liverpool bomb attacker Emad Al Swealmeen had become a Christian.

Al Swealmeen, who died in The Attack on Sunday, was a failed asylum seeker who had been refused permission to stay in the UK.

It Comes after newspaper reports suggested changing religion could be a way to " game the asylum system".

The Home Office declined to comment.

Al Swealmeen, 32, who was born in Iraq, died in The Explosion outside Liverpool Women's Hospital. Police believe for months.

He had to gain permission to stay in the UK but it was rejected without being considered In Court .

It is not clear if the Home Office told Al Swealmeen he would be removed from the country or if it took any steps towards doing so. And it is Not Yet known where he was Seeking Asylum from.

In a statement, The Church of England said " it is not The Role of clergy" to establish whether an asylum claim was legitimate.

And The Church 's Home Affairs adviser and not carried out just because it was asked for - " and never as a means to dodge the law".

There is no evidence being a member of The Church would fast-track an asylum claim, said Benedict Ryan, who also pointed Out There were " many genuine Christian converts" who sought asylum.

Analysis

By Harry Farley, BBC religious affairs

If someone can prove they would Be Persecuted in their Home Country as a result of their religious belief, that can form the basis of an asylum claim.

In countries such as Iran, religious minorities - and particularly Christians - Face intensive oppression. The Charity Open Doors ranks Iran as The Eighth worst country in The World for Christian persecution and Iranians are The Most common nationality claiming asylum in the UK, according to Home Office figures.

Many churches around the UK have large asylum seeker populations and some see high numbers converting from other faiths such as Islam to Christianity.

Church groups say this is because many asylum seekers find support through Christian projects.

But assessing whether someone's religious conversion is real or not is nearly impossible. Previous Home Office initiatives such as asking claimants to recite the Ten Commandments for lacking religious literacy.

A spokesperson for The Church of England said while it welcomed all who " choose to make a commitment to Christ" there was " also a need for discernment".

Clergy " must be confident that those seeking baptism fully understand what it signifies" they added.

" However it is not The Role of clergy to establish the legitimacy of asylum claims and to assess security implications, " said the spokesperson.

" We Are not aware of any evidence to suggest a widespread correlation between conversion to Christianity, or any other faith, and abuse of the asylum system. "

A spokesperson for Liverpool Cathedral , where Al Swealmeen's conversion ceremony had taken place, said: " Liverpool Cathedral has developed robust processes for discerning whether someone might be expressing a genuine commitment to faith.

" These include requirements for regular attendance alongside taking part in a recognised Christian Basics course. We would expect someone to be closely connected with the community for at least two years before we would consider supporting an application. "

Al Swealmeen had been baptised in 2015 and confirmed in 2017 but The Cathedral lost contact with him The Following year.

The Cathedral spokesman also said " welcoming people into a worshipping community" was One Way it engaged with asylum seekers.

A church worker in Liverpool said he believed Al Swealmeen was a " genuine Christian" saying he had befriended him through a Christianity course run for asylum seekers.

MAKING DEATH YOUR LIVING: IMAGINE One Day THE WATER JUST KEPT COMING:

Source of news: bbc.com

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