Forty years ago this week, Malcolm X visited Britain, just a short while before his untimely death. IRR News looks back. By February 1965, Malcolm had broken with his former idol Elijah Muhammad of the Nation of Islam and, having completed his tour of Africa and visit to Mecca, carried with him a spirit of
News Service
Fire cover cuts could affect Black communities
Local firefighters and the Fire Brigades Union are concerned that the West Midlands Fire Service’s plans to reduce fire cover could endanger the lives of vulnerable communities, especially Black and Minority Ethnic families and businesses, in some of the most deprived areas of the region. Andy Dennis, chair of West Midlands Fire Brigades Union, told
Citizens’ enquiry into service provision at Lunar House
Earlier this week, South London Citizens, an alliance of trade union branches, faith communities, schools and student groups from six south London boroughs, launched its own ‘citizens enquiry’ into service provision at the Immigration and Nationality Directorate offices at Lunar House in Croydon. The enquiry is to take oral and written evidence and will consider
Campaign launched for full access to HIV services for migrants
The Terrence Higgins Trust has launched a campaign to highlight the needs of migrant HIV sufferers who are being denied public healthcare under current NHS regulations. In April 2004, new NHS charging regulations were introduced to limit HIV treatment. The new regulations were a response to allegations of ‘treatment tourism’ – the idea that people
Desperate asylum seeker takes own life
At the end of January, an inquest into the death of Kurdish asylum seeker Ako Mahmood Ahmed recorded a verdict of suicide. He died after jumping from a bridge at a Coventry shopping centre in August 2004. Ako Mahmood Ahmed arrived in the UK in May 2004 and was ‘dispersed’ to Coventry in June where
No apology as courts expose double discrimination
In December, the Law Lords found that the government disciminated against Roma in immigration controls and against foreign nationals in anti-terrorist detentions. Together, the judgments reveal a mindset that has not changed since the creation of a ‘Fortress Europe’ in the 1980s. In two landmark legal judgments, the House of Lords, Britain’s highest court, has
Deportations to Zimbabwe contested
Over 350 people, mainly Zimbabweans from across the UK, gathered outside the Home Office on a cold Saturday afternoon last week to protest at the deportation of their countrymen and women to Zimbabwe. Many of the Zimbabweans outside the Home Office were forced into exile in the UK after being detained in Zimbabwe for speaking
Detention without trial in all but name
The recent decision by the Special Immigration Appeals Commission to grant bail to three men detained without trial since December 2001 and the release of an Egyptian refugee have been met with incredulity by human rights organisations, MPs and lawyers. On Monday 31 January, campaigners and community activists gathered outside the Special Immigration Appeals Commission
Roma: the forgotten victims
Over sixty people gathered outside the Houses of Parliament today to protest against the continued ‘ethnic cleansing’ of Roma people across Europe and the British government’s policies against Roma and Travellers in this country. The event was organised to coincide with the sixtieth anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz. Many of the protestors wore the
Continued unlawful detention
On 20 January 2005, over 300 people gathered outside Downing Street to protest against the continued detention without trial of eleven men under the Anti Terrorism Crime and Security Act 2001. Those present, many of whom were from Muslim organisations, were protesting at the government’s refusal to release those held without trial under anti-terror laws,