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Asylum seeker killed in Glasgow, Scotland
By Steve James
9 August 2001
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Firsat Yildiz, a 22 year old asylum seeker, was fatally stabbed
in the early hours of Sunday morning, in Glasgows Sighthill
estate.
Firsat had only been in Glasgow for a few weeks, when he was
attacked by two older white men while walking home from a meal
in the city centre accompanied by a 16 year old friend. He was
taken to the citys Royal Infirmary, where he was pronounced
dead. His friend is now under police protection, fearful of further
attacks.
Representatives of the up to 3,500 asylum seekers in Glasgow
have assumed that the murder was racially motivated, though the
police have suggested his death could have been triggered by a
robbery. Immediately following news of Firsats murder, up
to 300 Kurdish refugees protested by blocking traffic within Sighthill,
before police, some equipped with riot gear, forced them into
a car park. Some fights broke out between Kurds and local residents
and youth. Bottles were thrown. Glasgows police helicopter
was deployed. Refugees then marched to the City Chambers, two
miles away, a move repeated the next day, demanding more security
in Sighthill and the suspension of further movements into the
area. On Monday night 100 police were stationed on the estate.
The assumption of a racially motivated assault is lent weight
by the report earlier this year of a 170 percent increase in attacks
on asylum seekers in Glasgow. According to the Scottish Refugee
Council, there have been 70 racial attacks, seven serious, across
Glasgow since January.
Sighthill has become a key location for the Labour governments
policy of dispersing asylum seekers. Following vicious anti-immigrant
campaigns from Conservative councils in the South East, Labour
introduced a quota system of dispersal to towns and cities across
Britain and away from coastal areas and from London, where most
asylum seekers have traditionally been housed. At the same time
the government introduced a scheme through which asylum seekers
are given vouchers instead of cash for living expenses. Both measures
were implemented against a background of a hysterical press campaign
portraying asylum seekers as bogus and economic
migrants seeking to take advantage of Britains supposedly
generous welfare provisions at the expense of the tax payers.
For its part, the Labour government launched a campaign to discourage
new arrivals, impose ever more punitive anti-immigration laws
and increase the number of deportations.
The dispersal policy was advanced as a means of diffusing tensions
in the coastal areas by sharing the financial cost posed by asylum
seekers more equitably and not allowing the concentration of visible,
and by implication provocative, national and ethnic communities.
The reverse has been the case for a number of reasons. Firstly,
in line with the racism and nationalism that underpins all aspects
of government immigration policies, the underlying ethos of the
dispersal of asylum seekers portrays them as a financial burden
whose increasing numbers pose a danger to harmonious race relations.
Secondly, refugees are denied access to the type of support
networks, official and unofficial, that have been built up in
London and other major cities. Glasgows two law centres
are to receive £56,000 to improve refugees access
to legal support, while the Legal Services Agency will get £29,000
for some advice leaflets. On the week before he was killed, Firsat
Yildiz himself tried to contact the Scottish Refugee Council,
but was unable to speak to a case worker. None were available
because of the organisations already excessive workload.
Finally, asylum seekers are naturally sent into public housing,
which is generally made up of estates suffering extreme social
deprivation. Sighthill is a prime example. It consists of a number
of high-rise blocks, built by the Labour council in the 1960s
to hold the largest number of people at the least cost. Although
near the city centre, the estate is bounded by a motorway, a railway
line, a cemetery and a major road, and is isolated from surrounding
areas. Part of the Springburn area, which recorded one of the
lowest voter turnouts in the May general election, it has some
of the worst health statistics and unemployment rates in Britain
with 40 percent of the population living in poverty.
To date 1,200-1,500 asylum seekers have been housed in Sighthill
and the figure was expected to increase throughout the year. Several
busloads have been arriving every week. Neither the government
nor the local authority have provided any additional resources
to provide support for the increase in population of an already
extremely poor area, although the City Council will eventually
receive £110 million from the Home Office.
In the political climate created by the Labour government,
the Conservatives and the mediawith their ceaseless scapegoating
of asylum seekers for every social illthe development of
a racist backlash on Sighthill was predictable. Following the
protest by asylum seekers over Firsats murder, two counter
demonstrations were organised by between 50 and 100 local residents
protesting against what they alleged was the preferential treatment
given to asylum seekers. They pointed to the basic furnishings
in asylum seekers flats, standard issue for homeless persons,
as evidence of such favouritism.
On Tuesday night, a 22-year-old Iranian asylum seeker was stabbed
in the back on the landing outside his seventh floor flat in a
Sighthill tower block. He was rushed to the citys Royal
Infirmary, but was released from hospital in the early hours of
the morning after receiving treatment. The police are looking
for a number of white men in connection with the attack.
Neither the government, nor the Labour controlled Council,
can combat the racist sentiment produced by their own policies.
Their only answer is to either avoid a concentration of asylum
seekers in one area or to increase police numbers where asylum
seekers are located. The Scottish Refugee Councils Julia
Allan said on BBC Radio Scotland, A number of asylum seekers
have been introduced to Glasgow with very little ahead planning
and this is not eased when you are housing very vulnerable people
in a city with economic problems. She expressed her own
fears that locals believed the refugees to be bogus
and said the media and politicians were partly to blame for people
making this assumption.
See Also:
Scotland: Asylum seekers hounded
and beaten
[25 May 2001]
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