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: Holland
Fire kills at least 11 at Amsterdam airport detention centre
By Chris Marsden
28 October 2005
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At least 11 people have died and 15 are in hospital, as a result
of a three-hour blaze in a detention centre at Amsterdams
Schiphol airport in the early hours of Thursday, October 27. Police
have said the death toll could rise.
Some 350 people were detained in the series of prefabricated
buildings. Undocumented immigrants and asylum seekers whose appeals
have been exhausted are kept alongside hundreds of drug smugglersmainly
cocaine mules from the Netherlands Antilles and other
parts of the Caribbeanawaiting deportation.
Forty-three people were said to be in the wing that caught
fire, which has two dozen one- or two-man cells. Ten or 12 of
the cells were destroyed. The blaze broke out at midnight and
was not extinguished until dawn. The cause of the fire is still
unknown, but authorities have not ruled out arson.
Detainees describe horrific events. Several said that guards
had initially ignored their warnings of a fire and their banging
on the cell doors.
First they said there was no problem, and they just kept
us locked up, one said.
Guards did not want to believe the inmates alarm over
the smoke, he explained, claiming that the authorities said there
was nothing to be worried about.
Our throats started hurting. We kicked, we screamed,
we rang the bell, of course. And then panic broke out.
We remained locked inside. We were shouting at the top
of our voices until we were hoarse, said another.
The local mayor, Michel Bezuijen, said the 11 who died were
detainees, but their nationalities and identities have not been
made public. The 15 injured include 6 detainees, 6 police officers,
2 security guards and an official in charge of the centre. Four
remain hospitalised and one is in a serious condition.
The Dutch National Refugee Council criticised conditions at
the centre, particularly the lack of an automatic system to open
cell doors. Martin Bruinsma of the prosecutors office told
the media that cell doors could be opened only manually, one at
a time.
Helicopters were being used to search for an estimated eight
detainees who are believed to have escaped from the centre. Police
said three were arrested while trying to escape. Some of the detainees
have been transferred to other detention centres. Others were
transferred to a nearby prison outside the city of Utrecht. The
blaze was the second to erupt at the Schiphol detention centre,
the first occurring in 2002 shortly after it was opened.
Dutch Prime Minister Jan Peter Balkenende has promised that
an independent inquiry will be set up, as well as the regular
judicial inquiry. A European prisoners rights group, EORG,
said it will also mount an investigation. A spokesman for the
group commented, The way the fire spread quickly from one
cell to another gives rise to questions.
Mayor Bezuijen told reporters, We will appoint a third
party to carry out an independent investigation into what happened,
not just how the fire started, but also [whether] the safety measures
were adequate and so on.
The horrific deaths at the centre are ultimately the product
of the xenophobic anti-immigrant policies pursued by the Netherlands,
where the centre-right government that came to power three years
ago is in the process of deporting 26,000 asylum seekers who have
been refused the right to stay.
In May 2002, the assassination of the right-wing populist politician
Pim Fortuyn helped create the conditions for the electoral victory
of the Christian Democrats, who, together with Fortuyns
party and the Peoples Party for Liberty and Democracy, scapegoated
immigrants to divert attention from the mounting social crisis
in the Netherlands.
The government pledged to fight against the inflow of
immigrants with strict border controls and by refusing incoming
refugees without identification the right to apply for asylum.
Illegal residency was made a criminal offence, and a special police
force was set up to seize and deport foreigners or rejected asylum-seekers.
In February 2004, parliament voted to expel some 26,000 asylum
seekers from the Netherlands over the following three years. The
measure affected Afghans, Somalis and Chechens facing return to
regions beset by civil wars or with no functioning government.
Many had been in the country for more than five years and had
children who were raised in the Netherlands. Deportation centres
were opened up for the detention of families. Those refusing to
leave were threatened with a six-month prison sentence and the
loss of any entitlement to a job, welfare, housing or health care.
The latter measure was intended to force people to leave voluntarily
and thereby satisfy international human rights conventions.
Civil rights groups have warned that people face expulsion
to countries where they could be tortured or killed, in contravention
of international law.
In 2004, Human Rights Watch wrote an open letter to the Dutch
immigration minister opposing the denial of residence eligibility
and social assistance to the failed asylum seekers. It stated,
Human Rights Watch is deeply concerned that some of the
people subject to the planned deportations may be at risk of return
to a country or a part of a country where their lives or freedom
would be threatened.... We understand that Afghans and Somalis
are among the groups subject to the deportation proposals. It
has been widely recognised that returns to these countries at
present could place people at risk for their lives and safety.
The letter went on to note, Among the thousands of people
threatened with deportation under the proposals, children comprise
a significant proportion.... States have a positive obligation
to protect all children within their jurisdiction against abuse,
neglect, and exploitation and to ensure that children enjoy an
adequate standard of living for their physical, mental, spiritual,
moral, and social development.
The dangerous and degrading conditions in which asylum seekers,
undocumented immigrants and the often desperate individuals caught
up in the drugs trade were kept at Schiphol airport are part and
parcel of these vicious and undemocratic measures.
See Also:
The Netherlands: xenophobic
campaign follows Theo van Gogh murder
[23 November 2004]
Dutch parliament votes
to deport asylum seekers
[21 February 2004]
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