Alison Watson of Shelter Scotland said the housing crisis is being used to demonise refugees and asylum seekers
A Scottish charity leader has warned Scotland’s housing crisis is “being weaponised” to breed division among Scots and to stoke anger towards refugees and asylum seekers.
Alison Watson, director of Shelter Scotland, said in an interview with the Scotsman that recent political debates had "fuelled widespread misinformation".
"We are keen to see the debate shift away from discussion of a rolling back of rights, which would only make the problem worse and would just put more people on the streets," Ms Watson said.
“It has been distressing to see the recent debates on asylum, refugee rights and homelessness that have regrettably fuelled widespread misinformation – especially about local connection legislation.
"This legislation, suspended with parliamentary approval in 2022, has nothing to do with refugee homelessness.
"People granted refugee status have always been free to move anywhere in Scotland or the wider UK, as they are not deemed to have a local connection under law. It is also entirely separate from the abolition of 'priority need' in Scotland back in 2012.”
Ms Watson told the newspaper: “There are two big things that need to happen - the UK Government needs to stop making people homeless by default at the end of the asylum process. We also need to see the Scottish Government prioritise funding to areas that need it most - mainly in Glasgow and Edinburgh, because they have an increasingly high proportion of the homelessness applications.
“We have mainstream politicians using phrases like asylum seeker, illegal immigrant, refugee interchangeably. If our politicians can’t be precise and accurate in their language, how can we expect the public to be any better?
“It is at best reckless, at worst dangerous, to wade into what is a complex and difficult situation and to make it worse by muddying the waters rhetorically, rather than looking constructively at what can be done to make things better.
"While I’m sure it is not their intention, the only people it helps is the far-right. By focusing on avoiding homelessness and targeting resources then, at least, we’re talking about solutions not divisions.”
Housing Secretary Màiri McAllan told the Scotsman: “Scotland has the strongest rights in the UK for people experiencing homelessness and we have no intention of rolling back the rights of anyone in Scotland.
“In 2012 we abolished priority need which ensured all unintentionally homeless households were entitled to settled accommodation.
“Recently, we passed new legislation which will revolutionise homelessness prevention with ask and act duties on certain public bodies to ask about housing situations and to act to prevent people from losing their home. It also allows us to implement rents controls and improve standards in rented housing.
“Successive UK Governments’ mismanagement of the asylum system is creating serious pressures for local authorities, especially Glasgow. The UK Government must urgently provide more financial assistance to enable local authorities to provide safety and sanctuary for people seeking asylum and ensure their appropriate integration into communities.”