Latest News from Positive Action in Housing

Entries from February 2008

Residents unite to beat racists

February 18, 2008 · 6 Comments

by Wendy Miller

A Glasgow community has united in an attempt to stop racist thugs blighting their neighbourhood after a series of incidents.

Members of the new Glasgow South West International Forum have vowed to stamp out race and hate crime in the area.

They have also called on victims or witnesses to report every incident.

Their campaign follows a number of incidents in which people from ethnic minorities have been spat on and verbally abused.

Community leaders believe victims are often too frightened to alert police, while some do not realise a crime has been committed.

This, the leaders say, means low-level racism is going unreported and perpetuates a culture of hate.

David Reilly, of the charity Positive Action In Housing, which supports asylum seekers and refugees in the area, said: “People from all different backgrounds enjoy living in Govan.

“However, people have reported being spat on and abused in the street. This includes people from African communities and new European migrants, such as Poles.

“We are concerned that too many people put up with this as they don’t see the point in reporting it to police or their landlords.”

The forum aims to encourage more victims to come forward by promoting a third-party reporting scheme, where individuals get help from organisations, including Govan Housing Association and the YMCA.

Angela Gardiner, of Govan Housing Association, said: “The forum has indigenous Glaswegians, refugees and asylum seekers and some of the Polish community, so it is quite representative of Govan. The forum is committed to tackling racism.”

Nigerian minister Michael Angley Ogwache, 42, is one of the many determined to stand up to racist thugs after being confronted by a gang.

Reverend Ogwache, who moved to Govan with wife Christiana and their three children around two years ago, said: “I was in Elderpark Street at the drop-in centre. I came out to my car and they broke the side mirror.

“I tried to talk to them and one got out a knife. Another one spat right into my mouth..

“I reported it to police straight away. It’s very important to report these incidents. The third-party reporting is a good idea.”

Publication date 18/02/08

Categories: Appeal · Deportation · Detention · against dawn raids · asylum decisions · asylum seekers · attacks on asylum seekers · dawn raids · destitution · ethnic minority communities

Hospital defends treatment in asylum seeker death

February 14, 2008 · 1 Comment

Steven Morris and Eric Allison
guardian.co.uk, Wednesday February 13 2008

A young asylum seeker with a heart condition died as doctors tried to establish whether he was entitled to free treatment on the NHS, it emerged today.

Friends and relatives, social workers and the man’s lawyer expressed concerns that Mohammed Ahmedi, who had a partner and a young child, may not have received the treatment he needed - and was entitled to - because his immigration status was unclear.

Gloucester Royal Hospital (GRH), where Ahmedi died earlier this month after being treated there a number of times throughout January, insisted treatment was not withheld.

The Guardian has learned that when a social worker raised her fears over the treatment Ahmedi was receiving at the GRH two weeks before his death, the surgeon treating him referred her to the overseas visitors team, whose job it is to establish if a patient is eligible to treatment on the NHS.

Health sources close to the case have also confirmed that the hospital was in touch with the Home Office over Ahmedi’s status on a number of occasions.

A letter relating to Ahmedi’s treatment and seen by the Guardian also suggests that his immigration status was very much in doctors’ minds.

The letter, dated three weeks before he died and sent from a second hospital, confirms a date for a particular test but scribbled at the foot of the page is the message: “As I gather Mr Ahmedi is an illegal immigrant. It may be that he is deported before his treatment.”

Tony Jaffray, from the Gloucester Law Centre, who acted for Ahmedi in his claim for asylum, said he made the hospital aware that his client was eligible for treatment as his asylum claim was still pending.

He said: “I faxed the hospital with evidence to prove that Mr Ahmedi was eligible for NHS care. I was shocked to learn of his death.”

Ahmedi’s partner, Adrienne Gardner, said: “I am still feeling very confused about the way Mohammed was treated. He was very ill.”

A spokeswoman for Gloucestershire county council, who had contact with Ahmedi through social workers, said: “His care worker was aware of how ill he was. The team had been taking legal advice and advice from the department of health, doing everything they could to get him the medical care he so obviously and urgently needed.”

Ahmedi’s interpreter, who accompanied him on visits to the GRI, claimed: “The doctor treating him said he was worried that at some point there would be a problem with payments.”

The interpreter, who asked to be identified only as Adil, said: “A few days later, I got a call from Mohammed saying he’d been discharged. When he came out he just got worse.”

Groups that campaign for the rights of asylum seekers claimed many were finding it hard to get treatment on the NHS, even if they were entitled to it by law as was Ahmedi, who fled to the UK from Iraq.

A spokeswoman for Gloucestershire Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust said: “At no point was treatment withheld and the consultant in charge of Mr Ahmedi’s care is clear he treated him on the basis of clinical need and no other factor. Each time the patient was admitted, he was treated for his condition and afforded the same full care and treatment as any other patient.”

Neither the Department of Health nor the Home Office would comment on the case.

· This article was amended on Thursday February 14 2008. We should have said Gloucester Royal Hospital instead of Gloucestershire Royal Infirmary in the article above. This has been corrected.

Categories: Deportation · Detention · against dawn raids · asylum decisions · asylum seekers · attacks on asylum seekers · dawn raids · destitution · ethnic minority communities

Slipping through the net

February 12, 2008 · No Comments

Sunday Herald

A study of Scotland’s Polish population finds while most are in paid work, language difficulties leave many open to exploitation. Home Affairs Editor John Bynorth reports.

POLISH WORKERS moving to Scotland are at risk of exploitation by employers because most have only basic English skills, even several years after arriving in the country, and many are not registering with the home office.

The largest study undertaken into the lifestyles of some of the 86,000 poles who have moved to Scotland in the past three years suggests that almost half are unable to communicate in English.

However, more than 80% are not attending English classes because working commitments don’t allow it.

The study also found that one in four have not joined the home office Workers’ Registration Scheme (WRS), which must be done within one month of starting work in the UK.

That means the government has no record of their employment, leaving them exposed to unscrupulous employers who might fail to deduct tax and National Insurance from wages.

The Fife Partnership - a multi-agency group which co-ordinates the area’s local authority, police, NHS and other bodies - ordered the study in an attempt to understand better the needs of migrant workers, because of a lack of information about how many migrants lived in the area and the issues they faced.

The area has seen the largest influx of Polish migrants in Scotland in recent years, with unofficial estimates suggesting that 15,000 now live there; a figure that is double the 7000 living in Glasgow and more than the 10,000 estimated in Edinburgh.

The study found that: l More than 90% of migrant workers are currently in paid work.

l More than 70% did not make use of their qualifications and skills in their current job; 52% have a university degree or undergraduate-level qualification.

l 5% said their UK employers did not recognise their qualifications at all.

l 16% had not been given a contract and 6% did not receive a pay slip.

l 40% worked in factory or processing jobs, with a further 10% in the construction industry.

l More than half had English language skills “good enough to communicate” and only 11% said they were “very good”.

l 82% are not attending English classes, mainly because of their working hours.

l 2% of employers provide studies in the language; only 1% allow paid time off to study English and less than 10% allow them unpaid time off to attend lessons.

l 25% of the immigrants had experienced verbal abuse, while 5% had suffered physical abuse as a result of their ethnic background or nationality.

Some migrant workers complained to the Sunday Herald that unscrupulous employers are “taking advantage” of their lack of English skills and unfamiliarity with the WRS.

The results of the survey have led to renewed calls from an MP and trade union leaders for better working practices towards migrants.

Labour MP Ann McKechin is sponsoring a private member’s bill in the House of Commons which aims to end the practice of agency workers, who include many migrants, being employed on lower pay and worse conditions that regular staff.

McKechin claimed that not enough information about employment rights is provided for migrants and added that in her Glasgow North constituency the migrant, mainly Polish population, is “growing by 50% a year”.

She added: “You are beginning to see a lot of agency workers who don’t have English as their main language, and they are not familiar with their rights.

“Sometimes the Polish are reluctant to join the unions because of the political connotations it has back home, but when the Scottish Trades Union Congress STUC held a meeting in Glasgow a lot of them came forward with stories about how they hadn’t been paid for holidays and overtime. “We’ve done a lot of work helping asylum seekers, but there is no funding specifically for the needs of people from Eastern Europe and how we handle them.”

The STUC, which is supporting the bill, urged the government to end the practice of employing agency staff at a lower rate. Dave Moxham, deputy general secretary of the STUC, said the problems of migrants being denied access to career advancement would affect UK citizens attempting to get lower paid jobs in the long term and will eventually lead to social problems as the government attempts to get people off benefits and into work.

He blamed backlogs in further education courses for the failure of many migrants to learn English as a second language, despite increases in funding for English-language training from the Scottish and UK governments.

Moxham said: “Employers tend to teach them the minimum needed to get by. But that prevents them moving to other jobs up the skills ladder.

“The Scottish Government has given more funding to ESL (English as a second language) training, but there are still massive queues and backlogs in further education colleges with no resources to teach migrant workers to learn the language. If we don’t get these migrant workers up the career ladder, we are going to end up with lots of them competing with indigenous workers chasing the same low-skilled jobs, which is socially divisive.”

The STUC has called for the government and local authorities to work more closely together to provide contact centres and “umbrella” services for migrants in town centres.

Moxham added: “A lot of the problems of large numbers of migrants involved in prostitution start in the workplace. If, in your first job, it’s not explained that you need to register with the WRS, you immediately fall into an illegal situation. It’s a downward spiral as you have absolutely no recourse to advice and rights.”

The main point of contact for advice for migrant workers is the Scottish Government-backed Relocation Advisory Service. It has provided a range of information services, from getting a job to housing, for 17,000 people since it opened in Glasgow in 2004.

It provides a welcome package with details about living and working in Scotland, plus information on cultural networks, diversity and equality issues, how to seek employment, accommodation, and permits and visa issues.

Other support services for migrant workers across Scotland are overstretched. While many Poles turn to the Catholic Church to make friends, some travel 60 to 90 miles from Glasgow and Edinburgh to seek help from a Dundee drop-in centre.

Doreen Dowdles, who co-ordinates the city’s Advice and Services Centre, deals with a range of issues with the help of an interpreter.

Doreen has been known to take appointments from people by mobile phone at Polish airports as they are preparing to come to Britain.

She said: “We are swamped, dealing with anything from Home Office papers to organising National Insurance to finding accommodation. People tend to come here because there’s nothing like us across the board in Scotland. Dundee doesn’t have a problem with migrants, but we are mopping them all up.”

Maciej Dokurno, an interpreter and well-known figure in the Fife Polish Association who interviewed migrants for the survey, said the Scottish Government overall must do more to ensure information gets through to the community, claiming that money spent on translated leaflets is often wasted as migrants don’t pick them up.

Dokurno said: “I spend up to 40 hours a week on a voluntary basis helping people, attending meetings with Fife Council and trying to give people the basic information they should already have. What is needed is a strategic and organised centre where they can get information in Fife. Dundee is a good example.”

The Polish government is also taking a keen interest in the needs of Poles in Scotland. Last week, two senators met a group of migrants in Fife to discuss some of their concerns.

Senator Andrej Person said: “It’s still a better situation to be Polish in Scotland, than in Ireland and England, as relations between the Polish people and the Scottish are fantastic. We have to listen to their problems and set up strategies so that they understand the language, and their children understand Polish. It’s better to be Polish in Scotland than in London, because there is such a good sense of community here.”

Categories: Housing · Services · ethnic minority communities · immigrants · integration · jobs · new migrants · statistics

‘I’m happy in this country’

February 4, 2008 · No Comments

BBC NEWS

Aram says he is enjoying living in London and plays football every week

As the government announces that unaccompanied youngsters - denied the right to stay in this country - will now be deported, Aram, who came to Britain from Armenia, tells in his own words the story of his journey to the UK.

My name is Aram. I am 16 years old. I came in this country 10 months ago.

When I came in this country, someone take me to social services. They take me to Refugee Council.

In a hotel, I stay nearly two weeks. And in that two weeks, I was getting everything I need in social care. After two to three weeks, a lady called me. A Russian lady was interpreting.

They talked to me and they were very rude to me. I asked for water because I felt bad when I was talking about my life.

They said they had no water. It was very hard for me. After two hours, I was feeling very bad, they go out - after 15 minutes they said ‘we think you’re 18 years old’.

And they take me to [word unintelligible] and I was crying so much, I didn’t know where to go or what to do.

After that a man took me to a hotel and it was very hard for me because I don’t know how to cook, I don’t know how to look after myself and I was very bad. I was crying too much and I tried to do bad things to me, I was scared too much.

So after that I made Refugee Council - I was coming here all the time, I live here because they never leave me. And I am very happy for them, because this is my family - a very big family.

I like people, I love people - I’m very happy in this country, because this country is peace - no-one attacks no-one, everybody lives, no-one can take your life for nothing.

And I’m very happy for these people, because these people they help me so much.

I’m very young and I want to be useful. I don’t want to be very bad people, I want to help people because I can. I don’t want to waste time sitting at home. I decided to come and help them, so I want to be very useful.

I don’t like war, I don’t like when people die. I like this country too much, because in this country people don’t die. In this country I learnt to play football - I went to Refugee Council team in Kennington Park [south London]. Every Friday we’re playing football and I’m very happy for this.

I love books, I have two library cards. I’m learning English and I’m learning books.

Categories: Deportation · Detention · against dawn raids · asylum decisions · asylum seekers · attacks on asylum seekers · dawn raids · destitution

Asylum children face deportation

February 4, 2008 · No Comments

BBC NEWS
The government wants to handle child asylum claims more quickly

Unaccompanied child asylum seekers who are denied the right to stay in the UK are to be deported before they reach 18, the government has announced.
Currently, the Border and Immigration Agency waits until the young person turns 18 before beginning proceedings.

Children’s rights campaigners say the move could put those being sent back at risk on their return.

The government said authorities would not deport children until they were “100% sure” of a safe reception.

About 2,000 unaccompanied children seek asylum in the UK every year.

Immigration minister Liam Byrne said the current policy was a “green light” to organised gangs of child traffickers who knew children would not be sent home once they were in the country.

But Donna Covey, chief executive of the Refugee Council, said: “The government should not try to force any child to return against their wishes where their safety and welfare cannot be guaranteed.

“These are not children who come here seeking a better life, with their families waiting for them in peaceful homes. Many of them are children from war zones.”

Sir Al Aynsley-Green, Children’s Commissioner for England, said he welcomed the government’s efforts to tackle the problem, but he remained concerned about plans to withdraw support from unaccompanied children, especially those from “conflict-affected countries”.

“If they feel unsupported in the UK, these children could disappear from a local authority’s care well before their 18th birthday. This puts them at serious risk of harm…”

‘Compassionate’

Children’s charity the NSPCC said children who were frightened, alone and may not speak English would now be forced through an asylum process which was unsuitable for children.

It has called for the government to give separated children a right to an independent guardian to help them understand the process.

The policy change comes as Mr Byrne announced a series of measures aimed at handling child asylum claims “swiftly and compassionately”.

They include:

better procedures for identifying and supporting unaccompanied asylum seeking children who are the victims of trafficking

locating unaccompanied asylum seeking children with specialist local authorities to ensure they receive the services they need

speedier decisions on immigration status to ensure integration into the UK or fast return to a safe country of origin.
The government will also introduce new procedures to assess the ages of asylum seekers to help stop adults posing as children.

One suggestion, which will be consulted on further, was to force asylum seekers to undergo dental X-ray checks to assess their age.

Critics though said it was a step towards treating youngsters as suspect immigrants, not children.

The Home Office also announced it was consulting on a new code of practice on how immigration officers deal with children and on whether the UK should extend its commitment to the UN convention on rights of the child to include immigration cases.

This would follow the lead of most other European countries.

Categories: Deportation · Detention · against dawn raids · asylum decisions · attacks on asylum seekers · dawn raids · destitution · ethnic minority communities