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WSWS : News
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: Afghanistan
After the hijacking: British government, media demand deportation
of Afghanis
By Chris Marsden
11 February 2000
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The Afghan hostage crisis at London's Stansted Airport ended
yesterday morning with the release of all the 151 plus passengers
and the arrest of 19 people.
Earlier speculation that the incident was an attempt by the
hijackers and 40 members of their immediate familieswho
had booked onto the plane as a wedding partyto escape the
repressive Taliban regime in Afghanistan and secure political
asylum in Britain, has been broadly confirmed. Reports said the
hijackers of the Ariana Afghan Airlines Boeing 727 were demanding
immunity from prosecution and the right to set up an Afghan political
opposition in Britain. At least 60 hostages are seeking political
asylum in the UK, Home Office sources told the media.
Foreign nationals convicted of crimes in Britain would normally
be deported at the end of their jail termwhich for hijacking
could be anything up to nine yearsbut under international
law the government is also obliged to consider an asylum claim.
Six men involved in the hijack of a Sudanese passenger jet in
1996 are still awaiting a decision on their claims, while a man
involved in a 1982 Air Tanzania hijack was granted asylum having
served two years of a three-year sentence.
The possibility of asylum applications being granted to those
on the Ariana Afghan Airlines jet provoked a barrage of anti-immigrant
propaganda and law-and-order outrage from Britain's press. The
Sun tabloid newspaper dubbed the hijacking the Scamsted
scandal and boasted of Home Secretary Jack Straw's vow
that if the hijack proved to be a scam he would boot all
the Afghans straight back out of Britain.
Essex Chief Constable David Stevens was even forced to answer
questions over whether any hijack had in fact taken place. "I
can certainly, categorically state, that when you find five knives,
four handguns, one knuckle duster, two detonators and two grenades
without fuses, in my view that is a hijack," he replied.
The Times accepted that the hijackers could not be sent
back immediately to Afghanistan because they would be executed,
but questioned whether the appalling and savagely repressive
conditions they fled from should influence sentencing policy.
It should not ... severity is imperative.
Telegraph columnist Philip Johnston went so far as to
speculate that future copycat "refugee hijackings" would
pose a quandary for the authorities. On one hand, Britain
is entitled under international law to send in the SAS to take
the plane and kill all the hijackers, while on the other
hand it must consider all requests for political asylum.
In Straw's first official statement, he made clear the government's
intention to join the xenophobic chorus over the Stansted drama.
Promising to take personal charge, he told Parliament of his wish
to see removed from the country all those on the plane as soon
as reasonably practicable. As the flight had begun as an
internal journey within Afghanistan, "it seems inconceivable
that persons on the flight could have intended to claim political
asylum unless of course they were complicit in the hijacking,"
he added.
Straw's pledge to parliament amounts to a death sentence for
many of those on the Afghan jumbo. The Islamic fundamentalist
Taliban regime, which is not recognised by Britain and is routinely
denounced for its repressive policies, will no doubt agree with
Jack Straw that many of the passengers were complicit in the hijacking.
It will take a no less negative stance towards the 60 or so passengers
who are reported to have applied for political asylum. Last year
3,985 asylum application were made in Britain by Afghanis seeking
to escape the Taliban. Only a small number of these were recognised,
or given exceptional leave to remain.
See Also:
Afghan hijacking in fourth day at London's
Stansted airport
[9 February 2000]
Indian Airlines hijacking
highlights political tensions on the Indian subcontinent
[30 December 1999]
Afghanistan
[WSWS Full Coverage]
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