The England and Wales office of YWAM (Youth With A Mission) may lose
more than 350 missionaries and their families by April in the wake of
British immigration officials suspending the ministry's visa sponsor
status.
“Whilst we recognize and support the [UK Visas & Immigration (UKVI)
office's] legitimate right to concern over compliance to the rules, we
do not feel that the issues raised in the letter from the UKVI justify
such a draconian outcome as losing our license would produce,” wrote
YWAM Harpenden in an "urgent request" sent Friday and highlighted by the Evangelical Alliance UK (EAUK).
Following a September audit related to the UK's attempt to reduce
immigration numbers, UKVI officials found that YWAM had erred in two out
of the seven areas audited. While the missions organization says it
“immediately” submitted a corrective action plan to the government, the
UKVI warned that YWAM could be downgraded, limited in its visa
sponsorship capacity, or lose its license over the errors.
On December 23, YWAM learned that its license had been suspended for 20
business days, for reasons unrelated to the initial inspection. Should
the ministry prove unsuccessful at resolving concerns by January 20, the
UKVI may revoke its license and require missionaries to leave the
country within 60 days, YWAM stated. The ministry is asking supporters
to write members of Parliament by tomorrow [January 7].
Mark Vening, a missionary at YWAM’s Wrexham office, told CT that YWAM
had operated for 44 years “hand in glove” with the UK government. In
fact, six years ago, YWAM and other Christian groups worked with the
British government on a special provision which allowed religious
nonprofits to issue two-year visas, rather than the standard one-year
nonprofit visa, he said.
What does Vening think changed?
“The British government has said they want to reduce immigration by one
third. So they are going to have to find organizations that currently
have licenses and potentially take them away in order to meet that
target,” said Vening. “We wonder whether or not faith-based
organizations are providing perhaps a soft target for that.”
He noted that the UKVI revoked the licenses of other faith-based
organizations, including Wycliffe Bible Translators and Nations’ Trust,
in 2014.
In 2009, CT reported that the UK’s adoption of a point-based
immigration system, designed to bolster homeland security and regulate
the labor force, had instead confused many Christian ministries about how to properly designate their employees. It even led to US singer Don Francisco's deportation.
"Some of the problems we have seen are due to churches not being fully
aware of their new responsibilities, while on other occasions,
immigration officials have wrongly banned people from the country
because they haven't understood their own rules," the EAUK's Daniel
Webster told CT at the time.
The UKVI’s possible revoking of YWAM's visa sponsor status would affect
nearly half of YWAM’s England and Wales workforce and 70 percent of its
Wales staff, all of whom raise their own support, said Vening.
The missions group suggested that the loss of its license would significantly disrupt its operations.
“It would inevitably mean shutting down some of our training and
service opportunities at the Oval, in this nation and abroad,” YWAM
stated. Its well-known Discipleship Training Program would be most
heavily impacted with regards to both participants and staff, though
Vening says all day-to-day operations would suffer.
YWAM acknowledged that it has “never been the type of organization which fits neatly into boxes.”
“Nonetheless, we are doing everything we can to comply with the law and
ensure that our missionaries remain a blessing to the UK and, through
our YWAM England and Wales teams, to the rest of the world that YWAM
seeks to share the love of Christ with.”
Andrew Atkinson, a Conservative Parliamentary candidate for Wrexham who
is advocating for YWAM, wrote that while “immigration is a hot topic”
in the country, “YWAM missionaries provide an invaluable service to Wrexham.”
“I welcome the Government shining a light in every corner on this
subject and holding all kinds of businesses and organisations to account
in a way that hasn't happened before which led to abuse of the system,
in this case however I fear we may go to (sic) far,” he said in a
statement.
Should the UK government fail to reverse course, Vening says YWAM will
likely “pull out all stops” and “mobilize a huge public campaign.”
“We don’t want to be seen as the whiny nonprofit who is just stomping
its foot and being petulant," he said. "We’re very, very open to working
with the government to get this sorted. But we’re a little shocked and a
little confused with what’s happened.”
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