Visa income rules discriminate against working-class people, British father says

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"UK Visa Rules Criticized for Discriminating Against Working-Class Families"

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Leighton Allen, a British father, has expressed his frustration over the UK visa rules that have separated him from his partner, Sophie Nyenza, and their son, Myles. Allen met Nyenza in Tanzania during his travels in 2022, and the couple had hoped to settle in the UK together. However, changes made by the Conservative government have raised the minimum income requirement (MIR) for British citizens wishing to sponsor a partner's visa from £18,600 to £29,000 annually, with a further proposed increase to £38,700. This new threshold has placed a significant financial burden on working-class individuals like Allen, who earns £21,600 a year as a petrol station attendant. He articulated a sense of injustice, feeling that the visa rules discriminate against those from lower-income backgrounds who fall in love with partners from abroad, stating, "Why are we punished for it?" This situation has resulted in emotional distress for Allen, as he described feeling like a stranger to his own son, who has not been able to recognize him due to their separation.

In light of these challenges, Allen has received support from Reunite Families UK, which recently presented a report on the adverse effects of partner migration rules. The report highlights how these regulations disproportionately affect working-class families, leading to separation and long-term emotional trauma for children involved. The Migration Advisory Committee (MAC) has recently suggested that the government reconsider the income thresholds, arguing that the current requirements conflict with the right to family life as outlined in the European Convention on Human Rights. Despite this potential for change, Allen remains concerned about the high costs associated with visa applications, including NHS surcharges and English language tests. He cannot relocate to Tanzania due to restrictive migration laws and emphasizes that if his partner were allowed to join him in the UK, they could both work and support their family better. The Home Office has acknowledged the MAC's findings and is reviewing the situation, while advocates continue to call for a reassessment of the minimum income requirements to prevent further hardship for families like Allen's.

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A British father separated from his partner, son and stepson by UK visa rules says he feels as if he is “being punished for being working class and in love”.

Leighton Allen met his partner, Sophie Nyenza, who is from Tanzania, while travelling in the country in 2022. The pair had a son, Myles, and planned to settle in the UK.

But last year the then Conservative government changed the amount that British citizens must earn to be able to apply for a visa for a partner. Allen is now living in the UK but is unable to bring his family to join him.

The situation means his son doesn’t recognise him, Allen has said, while Nyenza, 32, who previously worked as a baker in Dar es Salaam, has to bring up the two-year-old and his 11-year-old brother, Alex, her son from a previous relationship, alone.

Until April 2024, British citizens could sponsor an unmarried partner’s visa if they could demonstrate earnings equivalent to more than £18,600 a year for at least six months, under minimum income requirement (MIR) rules.

Allen, from Worcestershire, was close to reaching the MIR when the threshold was raised to earnings of £29,000 or at least £88,500 in cash savings, figures out of reach for the 30-year-old, who makes £21,600 a year as a petrol station attendant.

He said: “If my mum and dad had that money in the bank and gave it to me, my partner and my family would be here – that’s what hurts the most. These are a set of rules that really discriminate against working-class people who fall in love abroad. Why are we punished for it?”

Allen is being supported by the campaign groupReunite Families UK, who this week at a parliamentary event launched a report on the impacts of partner migration rules, accompanied by an exhibition.

The report argues that the rules discriminate against lower earners, leaving “working-class families to suffer the pains of separation … and the lifelong implications that we know this instability causes”, while children face “life-changing trauma”.

Allen said: “I was [in Tanzania] relatively recently and felt like a complete stranger to my son Myles. It’s ‘phone Dad’, the 2D image of me he knows, not the actual person.”

Earlier this month, areview by the migration advisory committee(Mac) suggested ministers could cut the amount that a British citizen must earn to apply for a partner’s visa and suggested scrapping the previous government’s plans to raise the MIR to £38,700, saying the increase would conflict with the right to family life under article 8 of the European convention on human rights (ECHR).

Allen said: “If it goes up to £39k I would never earn that. And even if [the MIR] gets brought back down, for somebody like me, the fees – for the application, for the NHS, for the English test – are still high.”

Allen cannot move to Tanzania because migration law there does not treat adult males as visa “dependents” in most circumstances.

“I’m stuck in quite a hard place because I’m sending most of my pay to Tanzania, whereas if Sophie came over she could work as a carer,” he said. “Right now we’re both just surviving, but together we could thrive. Sophie would pay her tax, she wouldn’t be a drain on the NHS because she would have to pay the surcharge.”

TheHome Officesaid it was considering the Mac review’s findings, and added: “The government has already committed to legislate to clarify the application of article 8 of the ECHR.”

Caroline Coombs, a cofounder of Reunite Families UK, said: “The reality is clear: the minimum income requirement disproportionately impacts working-class and racially minoritised families. The rules must be rebalanced to prevent these unfair and damaging consequences.”

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Source: The Guardian