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Britain: Protests as High Court rules government illegally
detains asylum seekers
By Julie Hyland
12 September 2001
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Asylum seekers at two of Britains largest detention centres
have been protesting at the conditions in which they are being
held.
At the weekend some 93 immigrants and asylum applicants at
Campsfield House detention centre, near Oxford, which can hold
up to 100 people, began a sit-in at the centres main sports
hall. Most of these have also been refusing food since Saturday
morning.
Almost simultaneously a demonstration was begun by 75 refugees
at the Haslar Holding Centre in Gosport, Hampshire, which holds
up to 160 people including some asylum seekers. Refugee groups
reported that the Haslar protests started on Sunday evening, when
detainees refused to return to their dormitories and demanded
to meet with the governor and chief of immigration.
When the meeting promised for Monday morning did not materialise,
the detainees began a hunger strike. Within hours prison staff
were withdrawn from the building and the Mufti squad
(equipped with riot shields and batons) were sent in. A statement
by the Prison Service said that the Haslar protest had ended
peacefully at 9.00pm and that several of the detainees had
been transferred to Winchester prison. At the time of writing,
the Campsfield protest is continuing.
The protests were in response to Fridays ruling in the
High Court, London that the detention of four Iraqi Kurds at the
Oakington centre in Longstanton, Cambridge had breached their
human rights. Oakington is a fast-track centre used
to hold asylum seekers, whose applications the Labour government
deems unlikely to succeed. It is nominally designated as a reception
centre, rather than a detention centre, because those sent there
have not done anything illegal nor are they thought likely to
abscond and are therefore not supposed to be subject to restraint.
Acting for the four menShayan Baram Saadi, Dilshad Hassan
Osman, Rizgan Mohammed and Zhenar Fazi Magedlawyer Rick
Scannell said claims by the immigration authorities that Oakington
ran a a relaxed regime did not square with reality.
Under the centres house rules, the refugees are locked into
their rooms and are also required to return to their rooms in
the former military barracks when required by staff. Fathers are
separated from their children at night and mail must be opened
in front of officers. They can only eat at set times, must carry
ID cards, obey all staff instructions and are only allowed restricted
visits. Such restrictions, Mr Scannell argued, touch upon
areas of private life which are the cause of civil liberties debates.
The court heard that the four applicants were all Kurds who
had fled from the autonomous area set up in northern Iraq after
the 1991 Gulf war. Iraqis are the largest group of asylum seekers
in Britain. Despite the fact that successive British governments
have justified the war, the subsequent economic strangulation
of Iraq and continuous bombing raids on the grounds of Saddam
Husseins persecution of the Kurdish minority, the vast majority
of claims from the region are rejected.
Of the hundreds of thousands who flee Iraq each year, only
one to two percent actually reach Britain. Saadi, a doctor, arrived
in Britain on December 30 last year and immediately claimed asylum.
The Court heard that Saadi had been arrested by the Patriotic
Union of Kurdistan (PUK), after he had treated three injured members
of the Iraqi Workers Communist Party. After his release,
he had fled to Britain. Saadis application was rejected
on January 8, 2001, but he had been granted temporary admission
in order to appeal the decision and had later been taken to Oakington.
Osman and Mohammed had both been smuggled into Dover, England,
in two separate lorries. Osman arrived with four others on December
4, 2000 and travelled to the Immigration and Asylum Directorates
headquarters in Croydon where he applied for asylum. He was sent
from there to the Oakington centre, where he explained that he
had been a member of the PUK living in an area controlled by Saddam
Husseins Baathist regime. His asylum claim was rejected
on December 11, as was that Mohammeds, an ex-member of the
Islamic Movement of Iraqi Kurdistan, who had arrived on December
6 and claimed asylum on the grounds that he feared persecution
by former colleagues.
Maged also arrived at Dover on December 6, and again applied
for asylum on the grounds that he feared reprisals by former colleagues
in the PUK. He was sent to Oakington and his claim was rejected
on December 16, 2000.
All four had been granted temporary admission to appeal the
rejection, but only Mohammed has subsequently been granted asylum.
In his summation, Mr Justice Collins said that he expected
his ruling to affect a number of other Oakington refugees, but
he warned that it did not mean all detention, including that practiced
at Oakington, was illegal. The government, he ruled, can still
detain people individually with good reason but it
cannot detain a person purely on the grounds of their nationality,
nor simply in order to speed up administrative procedures. Detention
should only be used as a last resort, Justice Collins said.
The ruling brought a furious response from the Labour government.
Home Secretary David Blunkett described Justice Collins
decision as deeply disturbing, whilst news reports
said that he had privately expressed anger at the human
rights lobby for seeking to undermine immigration procedures.
The authorities have been given leave to appeal the decision.
Under present legislation, refugees claiming asylum are either
placed in prison, a detention centre or dispersed
to areas around the country. There are usually 1,800-plus asylum
seekers locked up at any one time . According
to the Refugee Council, the UK already had the worst record
across Europe for detaining asylum seekers before this Government
came to power. Since then, the figures of those being detained
have more than doubled, with over 65 percent being forced into
prison regimes. They are held for an indefinite period of time
with no information on how long this might last and are denied
written explanations of why they are being detained.
In a statement released by the Campsfield protestors, the refugees
said that their hunger strike was a cry for help from within
the inhumane and undemocratic detention system. Arguing
for lawyers in the UK, in the name of humanity and human
rights, to take up the challenge this ruling [by the High Court]
represents it called for the adoption of processing
centres rather than detention centres and for detention
to be limited to three months, after which those with close
family link would be granted bail or temporary admission for a
reasonable recognisance.
See Also:
Britain:
Racial Violence & Immigrant Issues
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