Despite a 21-year-old asylum seeker being served with three removal notices and sustaining a broken hand during one attempted deportation to Congo-Brazzaville, he has, with the help of campaigners, now been given temporary admission to the UK and submitted a fresh asylum application based on new evidence. Anicet Mayela, a 21-year-old asylum seeker from Congo
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Death case throws up police failings
On 29 June, at a second disciplinary tribunal of police officers involved in the failed police investigations into the murder of Jay Abatan in January 1999 in Brighton, two police officers were found guilty of various misconduct charges – for which they were reprimanded or cautioned. The tribunal revealed many troubling details about the police
Should more be done to prevent suicides in immigration detention centres?
After another apparent self-harm death in an immigration detention centre, campaigners are asking whether more should be done to prevent suicides in detention centres. Over the last few months, the detention of asylum seekers in the UK has been widely criticised for the mental pressures it puts on vulnerable asylum seekers. Most recently, Amnesty International
Dying to reach Europe?
To mark refugee week, UNITED for Intercultural Action, the pan-European network against racism, has revealed details of 6,300 deaths of migrants and refugees at Europe’s borders. UNITED has monitored refugee deaths since 1993. With the help of their network of more than 560 anti-racist and refugee rights organisations they have documented the six-thousand deaths in
Mass hunger strike against deportations to Zimbabwe
With the UK government issuing strong condemnations of Robert Mugabe, ninety-seven Zimbabwean asylum seekers, in detention centres across England, have gone on hunger strike to protest against the increasing number of deportations to Harare. Zimbabwean asylum seekers in detention centres across England have launched a mass hunger strike to draw attention to their plight. Ninety-seven
Seeking asylum is not a crime
A new report by Amnesty International (AI) calls on the government to ‘justify the lawfulness of detention’ of each and every single asylum seeker in the UK. AI concludes that in many cases the detention of asylum seekers is ‘protracted, inappropriate and disproportionate’. The report, Seeking asylum is not a crime: Detention of people who
Captain criticised for bringing refugees to Felixstowe
The captain of the MV Clementine Maersk, one of the largest container ships in the world, has been criticised in the tabloid press for bringing 27 refugees who were rescued in the Mediterranean Sea near Sicily, to the UK. According to the office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), which has praised
Supporting asylum seeker and refugee students – new developments
Last month, the General Teaching Council’s Achieve network held its largest event so far, a conference looking at issues related to supporting asylum seeker and refugee students. Sixty delegates attended the conference in London on 11 May 2005 and a similar number had to be turned away due to the high demand. The agenda for
Mounting criticism of detention of asylum-seeking children
In the last month, there have been a number of critical reports published into the detention of asylum-seeking children in the UK and the provision of care for them. Yesterday, Alvaro Gil-Robles, the European Commissioner for Human Rights, commented that ‘it is worrying… to note both the frequency and the duration of the detention of
ID cards: implications for Black, Minority Ethnic, migrant and refugee communities
The Identity Cards Bill, introduced on 25 May 2005, is aimed at enabling the policing of a harder boundary of entitlement between British citizens and foreigners. The result will be the creation of a new under-class of those who are ‘sans plastique’. The government’s ID cards programme is being justified by the perceived need to