Friday 17 January 2014

COMMENTS: VA support for Foreign & Commonwealth service personnel acknowledged as Bill gets Third Reading



House of Commons debates - Friday 17 January 2014





VA's work in championing the cause of Foreign & Commonwealth service and ex-service personnel often appears to take place below the radar but today, at the Third Reading of Jonathan Lord's Private Members Bill calling for anomalies to be addressed, it was clearly acknowledged.

Citizenship (Armed Forces) Bill - Third Reading

"The Bill enables us to remove the disadvantage faced by those forces and ex-forces personnel who happened to be outside the United Kingdom serving their country on day one of the five-year qualifying period for naturalisation. The Bill gives the Home Secretary the necessary discretion to overlook the current requirement in schedule 1 to the British Nationality Act 1981. The hon. Member for Croydon North (Mr Reed) asked whether the Bill is retrospective, and it is to that extent. Once the Bill is enacted, for anyone applying for naturalisation we will look back five years to what they were doing at that time, and the Bill will enable the Home Secretary to use her discretion, where appropriate, to overlook absences for service. The Bill will benefit people as soon as it gets on to the statute book. We will not have to wait five years for it to kick in, which is very helpful."  The Minister for Immigration (Mr Mark Harper):

For full text see: Citizenship (Armed Forces) Bill




Extracts:

Guy Opperman:
Anything that implements the military covenant, as this Bill does in a small but significant way, is a very good thing. What is the attitude of the various armed forces charities, which we all support, be it the Royal British Legion, Help for Heroes or Veterans Aid? What is their approach to the Bill?

The Minister for Immigration (Mr Mark Harper): 
The other organisation, already mentioned by my hon. Friend the Member for Hexham, is Veterans Aid, which warmly welcomes the change. Veterans Aid works for a range of former service personnel, and it works very hard for those who have had mental illness. I worked closely with the organisation when I was a shadow Defence Minister, and it works closely with foreign and Commonwealth personnel who have fallen foul of the system. Indeed, I met Dr Hugh Milroy, the organisation’s excellent chief executive, just yesterday to talk through some of the issues, and he has a very close working relationship both with my officials and with officials in the Ministry of Defence. Veterans Aid does excellent casework to support former members of our armed forces, both British citizens and foreign and Commonwealth personnel.

No comments:

Post a Comment