Amnesty denounces UK government citizenship fees

Amnesty International has denounced the UK government’s policy requiring British-born children to register their legal right to citizenship in the UK.

Amnesty described the policy as “profiteering” and an “outrage” as a hearing into the policy began at the High Court today.

When Parliament first gave children the right to register as British citizens in 1983, the fee was £35. That figure now stands at £973 – an amount that is effectively preventing hundreds of children from claiming their legal right, the charity said.

The landmark hearing, being brought by Project for the Registration of Children as British Citizen (PRCBC), will also address the legality of whether the Home Office can refuse to offer a fee waiver or fee reduction to a child who cannot afford the fee.

If a child does not have citizenship they can be denied free healthcare, the right to work, be barred from renting accommodation, and prevented from applying for loans for higher education.

Speaking outside the court, Steve Valdez-Symonds, Amnesty International UK’s Refugees and Migrants Rights Programme director, said: “It is an outrage that children who were born in this country are being charged an exorbitant sum of money to register their legal right to British citizenship.

“The fee is nothing more than a tax - denying thousands of children from low-income backgrounds the right to the same opportunities and identity as their friends.

“This landmark case must change this. The government should not be profiting from children.

“Children’s rights are not for sale.”

The final ruling is expected in the New Year.

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