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Entries from August 2008

Judicial review bid to stop activist’s deportation

August 6, 2008 · Leave a Comment

Unity Centre GlasgowA legal team supporting a Chinese trade unionist and her two-year-old son, who face deportation back to China after five years in Scotland, is expected to seek a High Court judicial review today to stop her leaving.

Birmingham-based solicitors Harvey Son & Filby, who specialise in Chinese law, are due to make the last-minute bid at the High Court in London to stop the deportation of Qin Wang and her son Jian Qi Lin. They are expected to use European human rights legislation to argue the case.

Friends who have visited her in detention said Qin Wang, who lived in Sandyhills, Glasgow, talked of killing herself rather than returning to China, where she says she was beaten and indecently assaulted by police when detained in connection with outlawed union activities.

The mother and son are due to be flown back to China today on a Russian Aeroflot plane from Heathrow. It further emerged last night that Aeroflot has been flooded with messages by e-mail and fax from supporters appealing to them not to co-operate with the deportation.

Qin Wang’s solicitors claim the Home Office took issue with the activist “going underground” for four years – scared she would be sent back to China – after first registering as an asylum seeker when she arrived in 2003. She re-registered in 2007 but failed to convince the Home Office of her refugee status.

Phil Jones, of the Unity Centre, the Glasgow-based help centre which supports asylum seekers and refugees, said he believed any travel issues over the removal from Britain appeared to be ironed out between the Home Office and Chinese authorities. He hoped the judicial review would mean that the flight would be stopped.

“The case is all to do with the fact that if she returns to China, she would be imprisoned,” he said.

THE HERALD

See Also
Anger over asylum seeker’s deportation
Unity Centre Glasgow

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

Life inside Dungavel

August 6, 2008 · Leave a Comment

THEY ARE LIKE GHOSTS, MOVED without warning or explanation across the country in the dead of night, transported in unmarked vans. A silent cargo, often handcuffed, frozen by fear and unable to make a call or let their family know what is happening to them.

“Ghosting” happens most nights as detainees at removal and detention centres are taken from their families and driven, sometimes more than 500 miles, the Sunday Herald has been told.

Staff claim Dungavel is at crisis point, with overcrowding at up to 150% and chronic staff shortages which often leave inadequate cover for “suicide watch”, according to sources. Five to 10 families with children are detained there at any one time, detainees claimed.

Each night the detainees, including young children, fear that they will be taken from their beds, not knowing if their destination will be another UK removal centre or an airport.

According to sources, ghosting is an increasingly common practice endured by up to 80% of detainees at detention and removal centres in the UK.

For the first time a true picture of life inside Dungavel has emerged as a detainee spoke about the daily routine at Scotland’s only removal centre.

“They move people all the time in the middle of the night. I live in complete fear,” said Charles Nahimana, 40, from Burundi, who was taken from his Glasgow home in February.

“At the headcount each morning there are new people who weren’t here the previous night. Most rooms have four beds and you wake up when they come for two, maybe three of your room mates in the middle of the night.

“You wake up again when they bring the new people in. Some have been picked up from their homes but most of them moved from other detention centres. I sleep in fear. If you hear a noise at your door at night you are immediately wide awake and your first thought is they have come for me’. People who have been spirited away like this tell me they don’t tell you what is happening. They take you and you have to switch your phone off and you can’t tell anybody what is happening.”

As he speaks Nahimana looks over his shoulder and holds his phone. It is his lifeline to the outside world.

He picks up his bible which has his children’s names in it. “I couldn’t send my two-year-old daughter a birthday card,” he adds. “I knew I couldn’t send a present but it was very distressing not to be able to even send a card.

“We are in a worse position than prisoners. If you were in prison you would have a sentence and know how long you were to be detained for. You would have certain rights. This is psychologically and emotionally very distressing.”

The tall and graceful former charity volunteer has lived in Britain for six years after he fled persecution. Two of his children were born in Glasgow and know no other world. He displays his son’s school report which shows straight As.

One removal centre employee told the Sunday Herald that many removal centres are at over 150% capacity. “I would estimate that they move around 70%-80% of detainees at night time. I have seen families arrive who are totally physically exhausted and devastated. They have been kept up all night. Sometimes they are transported long distances in the police cells in the van. These are basically cages inside the vans. They are sometimes handcuffed.

“But the main reason why they transport so many at night is that, unless they are in a police cell in the van, the detainees are often hammering on the sides and shouting and if it was daytime, imagine the outcry if a van like that pulled up at the traffic lights.”

John Watson of Amnesty International in Scotland said: “We are justifiably concerned about detention limits of 42 days but these are people in our society detained without limit.

“This kind of activity increases the discomfort and distress of these innocent people who should be treated with dignity. I can’t see that driving people around at night is treating them with dignity. None of the reasons given justifies the practice of people getting moved at night. Also, families are only meant to be detained as a last resort but our research is that it is not a last resort.”

John Wilkes, chief executive of the Scottish Refugee Council, said: “Holding children in the back of a van for eight hours or more, sometimes with no breaks or access to food or water, transporting them and their parents far away from their lawyers and community networks, is traumatic and inhumane at any time of the day.”

The UK Border Agency refused to answer questions. A spokesperson said: “All Immigration Removal Centres are operated in line with strict rules and are regularly inspected. Detention plays a vital role in maintaining an effective immigration control, including the removal of those without any right to remain here and who refuse to leave the UK voluntarily.”

Although immigration and asylum are reserved matters, a spokesman for the Scottish government said: “We have made clear our concerns about the operation of the UK asylum system in Scotland and the treatment of asylum seekers in general. We remain fundamentally opposed to dawn raids, to the forcible removal of children and to the detention of children at Dungavel.”

By Kate Smith
Sunday Herald

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

GARA PRESS RELEASE: New Report on Race Statistics in Scotland Launched

August 6, 2008 · Leave a Comment

From: Glasgow Anti Racist Alliance Contact: Ashay Ghai: 0141 572 1140

On: August 2008

Subject: State of the Nation Report Embargo: For Immediate Release

New Report on Race Statistics in Scotland Launched
With the lack of information on race and racism increasingly recognised, Glasgow Anti Racist Alliance (GARA) has launched its ‘State of the Nation – Race and Racism in Scotland 2008’ report, a collation of statistics and data relating to Black/Minority Ethnic (BME) people in Scotland. The statistics have been gathered from a number of sources, including Scottish Government publications, academic research, and studies carried out by voluntary organisations. The document highlights many discrepancies, such as a much increased rate of diabetes amongst BME communities but limited ethnic monitoring by the National Health Service and a significantly higher percentage of BME children in care.

GARA Director Jatin Haria explained;

“Strong statistical data is essential in Scotland if government and its agencies are to truly address the needs of Black/Minority Ethnic (BME) communities. For example, a report recently published by the Ministerial Task Force on Health Inequalities highlighted the lack of ethnicity data collection by NHS Scotland as a concern, making it more difficult to adequately meet the needs of BME people.

“GARA’s State of the Nation report seeks to address such requirements and will become an invaluable reference tool for policy makers.”

The document is being published following a consultation period involving many senior experts in the race and racism field.

Former Chair of the Commission for Racial Equality and current Professor in Communities & Race Relations at Glasgow Caledonian University, Dr Kay Hampton commented;

“I wish to congratulate Glasgow Anti Racist Alliance for identifying the need for and producing the State of the Nation document. By collating all information available on race in Scotland into a single report they have provided a powerful new tool in addressing the needs of Black/Minority Ethnic communities.

“I am confident that its publication will highlight any needs that must be addressed and make a real difference to black people.”

Commenting on the release of the report Minister for Communities Stewart Maxwell added;

“I welcome the production of this report which brings all the evidence on race and racism issues in Scotland together in one place.

“The Scottish Government believes that a successful Scotland is civilised, fair and inclusive and provides equal opportunity and choice for all its people.

“I hope this report will be a useful tool in reaching this goal and contribute to making race equality a reality across the country.”

The State of the Nation –Race and Racism in Scotland 2008 report, which summarises statistics in a number of sections such as health, education and employment, is available in on the Glasgow Anti Racist Alliance website www.gara.org.uk, or in hardcopy at cost (telephone 0141 572 1140).

ENDS

30 Bell street, Glasgow G1 1LG. T: 0141 572 1140, F: 0141 572 1141, e: info@gara.org.uk. www.gara.org.uk

If you don’t challenge racism – who will?

Categories: Racism · Services · ethnic minority communities