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: Britain
Britain: Fire at Yarls Wood detention centre highlights
plight of refugees
By Mike Ingram
21 February 2002
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Yarls Wood detention centre that holds asylum and immigration
detainees in Britain lies in ruins after a fire on February 14.
Investigators have as yet been unable to make the building safe
for inspection and up to 25 asylum seekers remain missing, possibly
caught in the fire. The exact figure of those missing cannot be
determined as records held in the reception area were destroyed.
In the immediate aftermath of the fire, press reports spoke
of rioting and arson by some of those detained at the centre.
The general picture painted in the press was that detainees had
burned down the building in an elaborate escape plot, with 15
people who fled the centre having been rounded up by police.
It is too early to say exactly what happened at Yarls
Wood, but certain facts have come to light.
By all accounts, the fire started after a disturbance by detainees,
which had been underway for several hours. The protest began after
security staff at the centre attempted to remove an elderly sick
detainee to hospital in handcuffs. The detainee had been ill for
the previous three days and others felt she should have been taken
to hospital immediately and that handcuffing her was an outrage.
At one stage in the protest, an estimated 200 detainees climbed
on to the roof of one of the buildings.
What is not yet established is how the fire started. Detainees
are adamant that the fire broke out in the reception area, which
they do not have access to.
Since the centre, Europes largest, was opened on November
19, 2001, it has been the scene of continuing protests. On December
10, 2001, five Roma people began a hunger strike and since then
not a day has passed without one or more detainees being on hunger
strike. An Eastern European asylum seeker went without food for
34 days. On January 18 this year, the majority of detainees at
the centre went on hunger strike for 24 hours. One of the main
complaints in this protest was also the handcuffing of detainees
being transported to hospital.
Emma Ginn, from the Campaign to Stop Arbitrary Detentions at
Yarls Wood, said in a statement, Since the camp opened
there have been daily complaints about the delays in access to
medical treatment and delays in moving people to hospital. There
have also been complaints about limited association times, bad
food, delay of incoming phone calls, the use of handcuffs when
detainees are taken to court, the dentists or to hospital, unequal
distribution of a weekly £2 telephone card to all detainees.
Neither detainees or visitors are allowed pen and paper during
visits and childrens access to education is very poor.
The National Coalition of Anti-Deportation Campaigns (NCADC)
said, Arbitrary detention, dispersal, vouchers, deportations,
self harm, suicides, racist attacks, snatch squads, are all part
of the daily life of asylum seekers in the UK.
The blame for what happened at Yarls Wood lies
squarely with the government. Their latest draconian proposals
for asylum seekers, unveiled in Secure Borders, Save Haven,
will lead to more incidents like these.
Yarls Wood was created at a cost of £100 million
as part of a network of removal centres able to hold up to 4,000
asylum and immigration detainees. Nine hundred of these were to
be held at Yarls Wood. At the time of the fire only 384
places were filled. Supposedly designed to hold those whose request
for asylum had failed and who would otherwise abscond, Yarls
Wood contained many detainees whose cases had not yet been heard.
Shortly before Yarls Wood opened, Home Secretary David
Blunkett announced new legislation aimed at speeding up deportations.
After much criticism of the previous dispersal policywhere
asylum seekers were dispatched to various town and cities around
the country, housed in sub-standard conditions and frequently
the target of racist attacksBlunkett presented the new laws
as a reform of the system.
Alongside the proposal to set up induction, accommodation and
removal centres, Blunkett announced the abolition of the hated
system whereby refugees were given food vouchers instead of cash
payments. The new centres were to replace the previous policy
of accommodating asylum seekers in prisons, which had been condemned
as a violation of their human rights. At the same time ID smart
cards were to be introduced for all asylum seekers, containing
the bearers photograph and fingerprints.
Far from being a progressive alternative, the legislation made
the detention of asylum seekers routine. Keith Best of the Immigration
Advisory Service (IAS) said he believed a major factor fuelling
the disturbances at Yarls Wood was the governments
decision to step up the pace of deportations. When you have
a situation which is driven by how many can we get rid of,
then you are going to get some stupid decisions, he said.
The IAS alone had successfully persuaded the court to release
half a dozen people from Yarls Wood because they were wrongfully
detained, he added.
The Independent newspaper quoted a former detainee at
Yarls Wood who had been a member of the Movement for Democratic
Change in Zimbabwe, the opposition party that has received support
from Britain. Little did I know I would be handcuffed and
stripped naked before being transported to my first detention
centre. I was treated like a criminal and shut in a dark room
at Oakington. The man said his wife and young son were sent
directly to Scotland and given a flat while he remained imprisoned,
first at Holme House near Middlesborough then Yarls Wood.
He said life at Yarls Wood was more comfortable, but still
controlled. It felt like living inside a submarine, totally
trapped and shut out from the outside world.
The Immigration Service and Home Office own Yarls Wood,
but management of the centre has been given to security company
Group 4 on a six-year contract. The company has been notorious
for serious operational failures at all the centres
and prisons it runs. Worlds, Buckley Hall, Parc and Doncaster
prisons and Campsfield House immigration detention centre have
all suffered serious problems within three years of opening. Some
were hit by riots and disciplinary problems, while others saw
fires or a high level of suicides.
It has also come to light that the government ignored advice
from the fire service to fit sprinkler systems at Yarls
Wood. Acting Deputy Chief Fire Officer with Bedfordshire Fire
and Rescue Service, Clive Walsh, said, We were asked for
our opinion at the end of 2000, early 2001 and it was our advice
to have sprinklers in a building of this type. Co-owner
of sprinkler suppliers Actspeed, Ashley Gorton, told the Guardian
that his firm had submitted a bid to fit a sprinkler system at
a cost of £350,000 when the centre was being built in November
2000. We had four meetings with the architect and other
people, but it got to the point where we heard no more from them.
The total damage to Yarls Wood as a result of the fire is
£35 million.
A Home Office spokeswoman has said sprinklers are not fitted
in any of the new detention centresOakington, near Cambridge,
Harmondsworth, near Heathrow Airport, and Dungavel in South Lanarkshire.
Neither are they installed at older buildings converted to hold
immigration detaineesCampsfield House at Kidlington near
Oxford, Tinsley House, near Gatwick Airport, Lindholme, near Doncaster,
and Haslar in Gosport.
See Also:
Britain: Labour introduces
ID cards and routine detention for asylum seekers
[3 November 2001]
Asylum seeker killed
in Glasgow, Scotland
[9 August 2001]
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