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Feb 10, 2026

‘Pulling up the drawbridge’: pressure grows over suspension of family-reunion visas for child refugees

‘Pulling up the drawbridge’: pressure grows over suspension of family-reunion visas for child refugees
Veteran Labour peer Lord Alf Dubs – himself a Kindertransport refugee – has launched a stinging attack on Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood for halting family-reunion visas for unaccompanied refugee children. In an exclusive Guardian interview published overnight, Dubs accused the Labour government of ‘kowtowing’ to right-wing sentiment and warned the policy echoes the 1930s climate that once forced Britain to act decisively for children fleeing persecution.

Under rules suspended in September 2025, adults granted asylum could sponsor spouses and children, but children had no equivalent right to join parents or siblings already in the UK. The freeze, ostensibly temporary until new “safe and legal routes” open in spring 2026, has left thousands of minors stranded in camps or transit countries. Mahmood argues border control must be restored first; Dubs retorts that delaying reunification simply drives minors into the hands of traffickers.

‘Pulling up the drawbridge’: pressure grows over suspension of family-reunion visas for child refugees


At a practical level, applicants and sponsors seeking clarity on what UK entry options remain viable can turn to VisaHQ for up-to-date guidance. Its London-based team and user-friendly portal (https://www.visahq.com/united-kingdom/) track every Home Office change in real time, helping families, NGOs and corporate mobility managers assemble complete, compliant applications without costly delays.

For global mobility teams the issue surfaces in CSR agendas and duty-of-care policies. Multinationals seconding staff to high-risk regions increasingly assess the reputational risk of appearing indifferent to refugee welfare. Some are lobbying privately for the Home Office to re-open limited humanitarian corridors so that employees engaged in pro-bono or NGO partnerships can facilitate evacuations without complex, ad-hoc waivers.

More broadly, the row underlines a hardening UK stance on all forms of legal migration – work, family and protection – even under a Labour administration. Mobility professionals advising assignees involved in refugee advocacy, journalism or relief projects should monitor the Home Office’s forthcoming “safe routes” blueprint, expected by Easter, and be ready to brief staff on what documentation may suffice once the suspension lifts.
VisaHQ's expert visas and immigration team helps individuals and companies navigate global travel, work, and residency requirements. We handle document preparation, application filings, government agencies coordination, every aspect necessary to ensure fast, compliant, and stress-free approvals.
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