Hundreds of children affected by UK’s halting of refugee family reunion, says Red Cross
The British Red Cross estimates that between 550 and 1,360 children, including 180 to 430 unaccompanied minors, could be separated from their families each month due to the UK's suspension of refugee family reunion, which began last September. This suspension is being challenged in the High Court by refugees and the charity Safe Passage, who argue it was a rushed decision.

Briefing Summary
AI-generatedThe British Red Cross estimates that between 550 and 1,360 children, including 180 to 430 unaccompanied minors, could be separated from their families each month due to the UK's suspension of refugee family reunion, which began last September. This suspension is being challenged in the High Court by refugees and the charity Safe Passage, who argue it was a rushed decision. The Home Office maintains the suspension was a reasonable response to the burden on local authorities, though internal documents suggested it could encourage dangerous journeys. The Red Cross has been contacted by 1,160 separated families fleeing conflict and persecution, highlighting the risks faced by those left behind. The government plans to introduce stricter criteria for family reunion in the future.
Article analysis
Model · rule-basedKey claims
5 extractedThe suspension was an entirely reasonable and rational response to the ongoing impact on public resources.
The British Red Cross has been contacted by 1,160 families left separated since the suspension began.
Internal government documents warned that presented options could encourage small boat journeys.
Hundreds of children face separation from families monthly due to UK's suspension of refugee family reunion.
Between 550 and 1,360 children could remain separated from families each month the suspension continues.