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Germany: SPD/PDS senate jail Tamil refugee
By Ludwig Niethammer
27 July 2004
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After a six-week hunger strike, the life of 23-year-old Tamil
Paramesvaran Sivabalasundaram is hanging by a thread. Only at
the last minute did the Berlin senator, Dr. Eckhart Körting
of the German Social Democratic Party (SPD), decide it was necessary
to transfer the Tamil refugee from a detention centre to a regular
hospital. His interior secretary, Ulrich Freise (SPD), announced
that deportation proceedings have only been temporarily delayed
to allow the victim to recover before he is deported.
Paramesvaran Sivabalasundaram, known as Siva, began his hunger
strike because the Immigration Office planned to deport him on
July 29 without having even reviewed the contents of his asylum
application.
Sivas tragedy speaks volumes about the consequences and
conditions of German asylum policies as implemented by Germanys
SPD-Green Party government. These policies treat victims of political
persecution as criminals.
In June 2001, Siva had participated in a theatre play in Sri
Lanka that criticised the government. Afterwards, the Sri Lankan
police arrested him and his colleagues. He was accused of being
a terrorist and a member of the separatist Tamil Tigers.
He was beaten and tortured while in prison, but in the spring
of 2002 managed to escape. On his way to London he took refuge
near the town Görlitz on the border of Germany and Poland,
where, lacking papers, he was detained and placed in an asylum
centre. He completed an application for asylum and then continued
his journey to his original destination of England.
He was again arrested in England, where he completed another
application for asylum. He was placed in a deportation centre
in Manchester, and then transferred to Berlin in May of 2003,
with the justification that he had already made an application
for asylum in Germany. German immigration officials were waiting
for him at the Berlin-Tegel airport, to inform him that his application
had already been rejected and that the Immigration Office wanted
to deport him immediately. The application rejection was based
on Sivas absence from Germany, although German officials
were obviously aware that Siva had applied for asylum in England
and had then been stuck there.
Because the immigration officials could not deport Siva without
identification papers, they placed him in the deportation centre
in Berlin-Köpenick. Since then, he has remained in the detention
centre and been forced to endure its degrading conditions longer
than any other detainee, simply because he is not willing to return
to Sri Lanka where he faces the threat of imprisonment and torture.
Siva describes his situation as follows:
I am spending my entire youth behind bars. Sri Lanka
locked me up. England locked me up. Germany locked me up, all
so Sri Lanka can kill me.
In April, the journalist Philipp Lichterbeck visited the Köpenick
detention centre, which during the existence of the German Democratic
Republic served as a prison for women. The building has reinforcements
that make it look like a fortress. Siva and the other 210 prisoners
are not only isolated from the outside world by iron doors,
bars, concrete, and barbed wire, but also by 300 police.
One police officer, who wishes to remain anonymous, told Lichterbeck
about the intolerable conditions inside the facility. If a prisoner
asks in English for a light for a cigarette, the officials bark
back, The official language is German!
Instead of offering language courses, they repeatedly
practice how one puts on hand cuffs. There is a group of officials
who take every opportunity to pick on the prisoners. One covers
up for the other. The prisoners have no chance before the courts.
The official also spoke about Siva: The immigration officials
could have let him go a long time ago. In my eyes, that is just
preventive detention.
The detentions can only be described as arbitrary. As in the
case of Siva, those who do not cooperate and refuse to sign a
passport for their return journey are simply left in prison until
they break.
A spokeswoman for the Berlin interior department, Henrike Morgenstern,
considers these methods to be entirely appropriate. In her view,
Siva is exclusively to blame for his long imprisonment. According
to her absurd argument, each time he files an asylum application
he prevents himself from being deported. Furthermore, the deportation
is delayed because Sivabalasundaram does not cooperate in
obtaining travel documents.
Lichterbeck also reported in his article that every year, about
5,000 of these deportations are carried out. Half of the victims
are immediately deported, while the other half receive some measure
of toleration, are set free, but are then later deported. Last
year, 28 prisoners tried to take their own lives.
Christine Schmitz from the Initiative Against Asylum Deportations,
which represents Siva, informed the World Socialist Web Site
that Siva is recovering after his hunger strike, but that he is
still suffering from the consequences of his protest. The deportation
has not been cancelled, and he must reckon every day with his
potential deportation. Above all else, he fears a new stretch
of detention in Köpenick.
Siva has always maintained that he would rather die than be
deported and delivered to the Sri Lankan police. He is wracked
by fear and exhibits signs of having been tortured. Nothing indicates
at this time that the Berlin interior department will change its
position regarding his case, although Siva and his lawyer are
pleading for clemency. They are demanding that the German Office
for Asylum stop bending European regulations and give him the
hearing to which he is entitled.
That Siva has been refused the most elementary right to a hearing
for more than 13 months, combined with the refusal of the Berlin
authorities to grant him clemency, demonstrates the inhuman and
reactionary character of the laws passed by the German SPD-Green
government.
At the same time, the case underscores the acquiescence of
the PDS (Party of Democratic Socialism) faction in the Berlin
Senate in carrying out these restrictive deportation policies.
Not a single PDS politician, inside or outside the Senate, has
spoken out against Sivas deportation. The PDS treats foreigners
and refugees with the same contempt it shows to the socially disadvantaged
in Berlin. PDS Social Senator Heidi Knake-Werner explained recently
that, in line with new government laws, the unemployed can be
productively employed sweeping up leaves in Berlin parks. Just
as the PDS is ready to implement government laws against asylum
seekers, it is also prepared to impose the so-called Hartz-IV
laws against the unemployed. As Knake-Werner stated, We
would also, of course, implement a law the consequences of which
we view critically. That is our job, although it does not alter
the fact that we have reservations.
See Also:
European governments make an example
of Cap Anamur refugees
[24 June 2004]
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