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Harmondsworth Detention Centre
Britain: Report documents brutality against asylum-seekers
By Niall Green
11 October 2003
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A report issued by the chief inspector of prisons in England
and Wales into conditions at the Harmondsworth Detention Centre
in 2002 has called for a police investigation into reports of
detainees being beaten by staff. Several detainees are alleged
to have been assaulted during transfers in and out of the centre,
often as they are sent for deportation. On several occasions during
detainee transfers, prison service Tactical Intervention Squadsarmed
with riot gearhave been called in to assist the private
security guards that man the centre.
The author of the report, Anne Owers, met one asylum-seeker
who had required hospitalisation for injuries sustained during
an attempt to deport him and others who had suffered serious assaults
at the hands of guards. She acknowledged that allegations by detainees
of assault were common but that few were referred
to the police.
It is extremely important, Owers said, that
such claims should be fully investigated and, if necessary, prosecuted,
but we are told that police and prosecutors were reluctant to
act. If so, this is unacceptable.
Of the nine assaults against detainees reported to the police
in the past year all were dismissed as unsubstantiated.
The report also criticises the centre as being an essentially
unsafe place for detainees and staff. There were increasing
levels of disorder in the facility and a detainee-on-detainee
assault rate of approximately seven attacks per week. There is
an average of one self-harm incident a week officially recorded
by the centre, a figure likely to be far higher in reality. Despite
this the inspectorate found that suicide, self-harm and
anti-bullying procedures were not efficiently managed. There
was also found to be insufficient mental health support for detainees
held in the centres medical unit.
Owers claimed that Harmondsworth was frightening and
potentially dangerous and not well equipped to ensure
detainees protection. Levels of desperation among
detainees at the centre are understandably high, with many having
been resident in one or more detention centre for months. Harmondsworth
is situated next to Londons Heathrow Airport and serves
as the last port of call for thousands of asylum-seekers before
their forced removal from Britain.
The report criticised staff shortages and poor health and safety
protection. It pointed out that a number of small fires at the
centre had severely tested the fire response capability
there. Like the Yarls Wood Detention Centre that was ravaged
by fire in 2002, Harmondsworth is not fitted with a sprinkler
system. During the blaze at Yarls Wood staff were unable
to cope, leaving the panicked detainees to their own fate. Conditions
in Harmondsworth are directly comparable to those that existed
in Yarls Wood prior to its near destructionan event
that could have claimed the lives of scores of detainees and staff.
Harmondsworth has a family unit capable of holding dozens of
families with children. There were 25 children held at the centre
at the time of the inspection. Owers found that the educational,
recreational and developmental requirements of young people at
the centre were being inadequately provided for. Furthermore,
the lack of personal security for detainees and the presence of
many traumatised adult asylum-seekers created an environment wholly
unsuitable for children. Given the inherent insecurity of
the centre as a whole, we remain of the view that, as in other
centres in England, children should only exceptionally be detained
in Harmondsworth, and not for any period longer than seven days,
the report stated.
The children of asylum-seekers, whether at a single centre
or cumulatively by being moved from one centre to another, often
spend large portions of their childhood in these grim and dangerous
facilities prior to being deported.
The report comments that many of the problems at Harmondsworth
are common to all the asylum centres: Many of the systematic
problems that detainees experienced at Harmondsworth have already
been covered in the Inspectorates six previous reports.
These include: the inability of the Immigration Service
to progress cases efficiently or communicate effectively with
detainees; the absence of sufficient competent legal advice and
representation; the need for independent welfare advice to assist
detainees to deal with practical problems during detention and
on removal; and the need for more activities for detainees, including
the ability to work.
It is not the first official report to criticise Burns International,
the private security firm contracted by the Home Office to run
Harmondsworth until earlier this year. In April this year a Home
Office reportonly published following pressure from the
human rights group Libertyon an investigation into the suicide
in 2000 of Lithuanian asylum-seeker Robertus Grabys exposed some
of the conditions facing vulnerable asylum-seekers in Harmondsworth.
The Home Office concluded that there had been insufficient care
for Mr. Grabys who was known to be suffering from severe depression.
Found hanging in his cell on the day he was to be deported, he
had been dead for over an hour. Burns International had not placed
him on a suicide watch, and the centre was found to have no formal
policy to prevent suicides.
In February Burns Internationala division of the Swedish-based
multinational security company Securitaswas outbid for the
Harmondsworth contract by Premier Detention Services Ltd., which
currently runs the much criticised regime at the Dungavel asylum
centre in Scotland.
From 2001 Harmondsworth held up to 550 detainees. In 2002 a
further 550-bed unit was added to the complex making it the largest
immigration detention centre in the country. The centre processes
around 12,000 people a year, none of whom are sent there for committing
a criminal offence. Rather, men, women and children are held in
prison-like conditions to facilitate the Blair Labour governments
intimidating policy of rounding up asylum-seekers in order to
deter them from seeking refuge in Britain. The government is currently
attempting to arbitrarily halve the number of people claiming
asylum.
See Also:
Britain: Notorious Yarls
Wood asylum detention centre reopens
[25 September 2003]
Britain: Iranian asylum seeker
driven to suicide
[12 September 2003]
Blair government endorses Murdochs
anti-immigrant campaign
[10 September 2003]
Britain: Asylum-seekers detained
under prison-like conditions
[7 August 2003]
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