Showing posts with label Liverpool. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Liverpool. Show all posts

Tuesday, 9 August 2011

In Liverpool, one young gay refugee shows his Pride

Zac Daily outside the Liver Building
Last Saturday, Liverpool held its second official Pride Festival. Over 40,000 attended - twice last year's number.

Amongst those there was 'Zac Daily', a young gay refugee from the Middle East.

Here 'Zac Daily' talks of his joy at attending this out'n'proud event:
"The 6th of August was the second Liverpool Gay Pride Festival — a day without fearing for being who you are, not what you have become."

"The day started full of excitement and happiness. I was thinking 'what is going to happen?' It's really strange for a person who comes from a different culture, used to always hiding his sexuality, that I am going to walk for the second time in a big gay festival."

"The first time was crazy. I was so nervous and wondering what people were going to think about me. I spent a long time thinking about what to wear in the march, but someone told me that I am going to be 'the angel of the Armistead centre' (The Armistead centre is a NHS Liverpool Community Health service for LGBT)."

"I was so happy and thinking how amazing I am going to be! I was thinking to write again something on my chest saying 'Summer of Gay Love', as the theme is 'Summer of love'."

"The march started and I was so excited, shouting and waving the rainbow flag: The best flag I have ever seen in my life, full of colour, it's shining around the Pier Head in Liverpool. I couldn’t express how proud I am. I just want to say it loud! 'You talking about human being. You talking about people who is trying to be themselves.'"

"I was so annoyed that we saw six or seven people holding signs against us. It is just crazy - because of them people kill themselves, because of them people hate themselves, because of them people don’t accept themselves. We are in 2011! When is that bullying and hate going to stop?"
"Being gay is an issue for some people and I learned that you should not be scared of who you are. Don’t be scared to lose your friends or family. A person who loves you inside will stick by you. Be honest with yourself and you will see how amazing you are. I am living my own life and enjoying every bit of it - and the best thing I’ve ever learned from Liverpool is to be proud of who I am."

Saturday, 12 March 2011

In UK, asylum seekers forced to trek across country to lodge claims

Clark at North AveImage by Kymberly Janisch via Flickr
Source: British Red Cross and Refugee Survival Trust

A new report produced by the British Red Cross and the Refugee Survival Trust (RST), highlights the plight of people who currently have to travel from Scotland to Croydon, in South London [c350 miles or 550 Km], to register their claims – with no financial support from the government.

In the 21 Months Later report, The Red Cross and the RST call on the UK Border Agency to meet the travel costs of asylum seekers who have to make the 400-mile trip until the UK government agrees to allow them to claim asylum in Scotland. At the moment, the Red Cross and the RST pay for food and overnight bus travel to Croydon for claimants in Scotland.

Scottish Refugee Council distributes RST grants to people who arrive at our door, having just arrived in the country and wishing to claim asylum. We join in the call for asylum seekers to be able to start their claim in Scotland, and feel the current system is inhumane and unnecessary.

The report is a follow-up to a document entitled 21 Days Later, produced jointly by the organisations almost two years ago, which exposed the plight of asylum seekers facing destitution on the streets of Scotland because of a lack of support.

Friday, 3 December 2010

British gay arts projects take human rights message to Turkey

Barbers' Garden 2008: PansiesImage by bill barber via Flickr   
Source: Pink Paper

By Joanne Dunning

Homotopia, Pansy Project, Amnesty International and Lambda Istanbul will team up to plant hundreds of pansies in Istanbul to commemorate all victims of hate crime and persecution.

Merseyside's LGBT culture festival Homotopia are working with Pansy Project artist Paul Hartfleet and Amnesty International to take their human rights and social justice work to Istanbul, as part of the city's European Capital Of Culture celebrations.

Homotopia will be producing a series of interventions, organising debates and carrying out research in Istanbul, but the week will culminate with the planting of hundreds of pansies on 2 December, to symbolise the ongoing international struggle for lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender rights.

Gary Everett, Artistic Director of Homotopia highlighted the importance of doing this work in Istanbul: "In a country like Turkey, where prominent politicians find it acceptable to call homosexuality an offence and immoral on the TV and radio, and where many LGBT people still don’t feel able to come out or be accepted, this project is an important and a timely reminder of why such work is vital."

Homotopia hope that their work in Turkey will act as a creative intervention against trans and homophobic violence in Turkey and around the world.

Jessica Hand HM Consul-General to Istanbul will plant the first pansy to commemorate all victims of hate crime and persecution. She said: “Protecting the rights of minority groups, wherever they may be, is a shared responsibility for all. Prejudice and discrimination are destructive to societies and individuals."

The Homotopia Festival ran in Liverpool until the end of November, Gary Everett then took the festival's social justice message to Istanbul.
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Friday, 16 July 2010

Daily Express protest misses the point – and doesn't help Zac

Source: The Guardian

By Paul Canning

There's a protest happening outside the Daily Express office in London this afternoon. Any protest against the Express gets two thumbs up from me. It's a vile, nasty rag. But this one seems a tad pointless and the anger misplaced.

Last week's supreme court decision on gay and lesbian asylum seekers generated the Express front-page headline: "Now asylum if you're gay" – hence the protest. The usual suspects, including the Daily Mail and talk radio, all behaved predictably too. But a few days before the Express's front page appeared, a gay asylum seeker was being put into actual danger by the Sun.

Zac is a gay teenager from Abu Dhabi, the most conservative of the United Arab Emirates. He's been in the UK for six years but ran away last year from his family after he was rejected by them when he came out. He got help and after claiming asylum was moved to Liverpool. There he found friends and a (hopefully) long-term partner – a new, happier and safer life. His asylum claim as a gay man under threat if he returned home was rejected by the Home Office, as most have been, but his appeal is on track.

In Dubai this week another gay man was sentenced to three years in jail. In Abu Dubai a few years ago 25 men were arrested in a raid on a party and threatened with hormone treatment – which was only stopped after US state department protests.

Zac also has a talent: he can sing. And like many teenagers he tried his hand with The X Factor talent show. He passed the initial audition and had been called back for further trials in Manchester last week.

But, it appears, someone connected with Talkback Thames, the show's producers, contacted the press and on 3 July a nasty story about Zac appeared in the Sun. He was only told about it two days later and after being told in the same phone call to prepare five songs for another audition later the same day. After he called the Sun and they told him the information had come from The X Factor, he was dropped.

The Sun's story uses his real name. Association of his family's name with homosexuality puts Zac in real danger as his father has already tried to kill him. Where, I wonder, could the Sun have discovered his name from?

For the record, Talkback Thames denies passing his name to the Sun.

Perhaps today's protesters at the Express should, if concerned to help an actual gay asylum seeker, travel a bit further east to News International's HQ, or four miles west to Talkback Thames. The pointlessness of demonstrating outside the Express building is underlined if you read the protesters' statement railing against homophobia in the media and invoking protests to the Press Complaints Commission. It doesn't appear to have been drawn up in discussion with anyone working with actual gay asylum seekers, but they have got the National Union of Journalists on board.

Have we learned nothing from the death of a gay pop singer, his slagging off in the Mail and the waste of time trying to complain using section 12 of the PCC's editors' code (Discrimination)?

Use of this section will always bang up against principles of free speech and I'm not so sure that's a bad thing. There's a vengeful tendency in the gay community, which I understand, but the line in law and ethical codes should be about provoking violence.

No, what the tabloids did with the gay asylum supreme court decision, which I suspect Lord Rodger deliberately created for them, should be complained about under editors' code, section 1, (i) – "inaccurate, misleading or distorted information" – because every single one of the tabloids took the judge's "right to Kylie and cocktails" comments out of context (as did even some foolish gay commentators). Read the whole thing. He used the comments deliberately "as stereotypes" to say that being gay is about more than sex.

Being "discreet", as the Guardian's Michael White and the Home Office perceive it to be, is not just being quiet about sex or not showing affection in the street. It's about suppressing everything about yourself – a near impossibility. As was put to the supreme court, the analogy is of Anne Frank in her attic being "discreet" – and yet still "found out".

Lord Rodger chose his language deliberately to make that point. "Discretion" is never expected of "straight" people: this is about equality and whether Britain believes in it or not. This sailed over many heads, including the TalkSport presenter who invited me on, ignored what I explained and carried on about gay "privileges". Legally, the supreme court's ruling is a landmark for LGBT (lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender) rights.
So if you want to make a homophobia point to the PCC about the Mail, Express and Star on gay asylum, mention section 1, (i) of the code.

If you want to help gay asylum seekers more directly, you can support a charity that works on their behalf and you can demand real change, not just promises, from the coalition government.

If you want justice for Zac, send Talkback Thames a message. And maybe schedule another demonstration?
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Thursday, 15 July 2010

Did X Factor 'out' a gay asylum seeker, putting him in danger?

By Paul Canning

The production company for hit TV show X Factor passed the real name to the Sun newspaper of a contestant who is a young Middle Eastern gay asylum seeker, he has claimed in comments published by Manchester's Lesbian and Gay Foundation (LGF) and then Pink Paper.

The Sun subsequently ran an inaccurate article belittling the asylum seeker and this was then picked up in the Middle East, which has put him in danger.

The asylum seeker known as Zac told LGF:
“I was shocked that the paper used my real name and age. I rang them and they said a press release had come from the X Factor’s marketing company.”
LGBT Asylum News has confirmed that the conversation with Sun journalist Chris Robertson took place in the presence of a worker for the Young Person's Advisory Service (YPAS) in Liverpool, of which Zac is a client.

YPAS LGBT Youth Co-ordinator Kieran Bohan told us that Zac had been called by the X Factor 5 July to inform him about the article which was published 3 July. Zac then went to YPAS and Robertson was called. He told Zac that the article was based on a press release.

It is common practice for entertainment news stories to be based in part or entirely on material supplied by public relations companies or departments.

Zac had also been told by X Factor to prepare five songs for an audition in Manchester however later in the day he was called and told that they didn't want him after all. Kieran said that it is his belief that the story was placed "in order to drop Zac."

LGF says that Zac did give his personal details as part of the audition process and “signed a lot of papers” but was assured that his personal information wouldn’t get published.

X Factor producers Talkback Thames have denied that The Sun received a press release, telling us:
There was no press release issued to the sun by the x factor. We did not disclose personal information about this contestant.
The Sun would not discuss the origins of the story with us.

The story published in The Sun was picked up by two news websites in the United Arab Emirates (UAE) as well as social media. This would put Zac in danger of persecution including possible physical harm if his case is rejected and he is returned. But a source in Dubai (via Gay Middle East) suggested to us that the most serious risk to Zac would be that the mention of the family name in the media in connection with homosexuality could also cause problems for family members or cause family members to cause further harm to Zac - even though he now lives in Liverpool.

The Middle East based website 7 Days was one outlet which picked up on The Sun's article, saying “it is unclear why he doesn’t want to return to the UAE” but Zac says:
“They make it sound ridiculous, they don’t realise the harm. I wish I could go back, but as a gay man it’s not safe. I would be killed by my father. The government would jail me, if I didn’t change my behaviour on release. I’d face the death penalty. My religion says I would be killed for having relations with a man.”

"If I went back, I would be arrested at the airport because the paper printed my real name and sexuality. The police would say change, they would beat me, anything could happen. I could be put to death.”
Dan Littaneur, Gay Middle East (GME) Editor, told us:
"If Zac is deported to Abu Dhabi he is very likely to be in serious trouble with the authorities; article 80 of the Abu Dhabi Penal Code makes sodomy punishable with imprisonment of up to 14 years."

"GME has received various reports and there are also news articles that have revealed how the law is typically enforced including imprisonment, forced hormonal and psychological treatments. Most of the inhabitants of Abu Dhabi are strict Sunnis followers of the Maliki school which believe that sodomy merits death by stoning."

"Being gay is seen as one of the worst crimes and offenses against the faith, honour and integrity of not only the accused person but for all his family members and those who have dealings with them."

"A source of GME in the Emirates commented that due to these facts, Zac will be most definitely be socially ostracised and may face abuse, both psychological and physical from his family, the authorities and the general public. He will be unlikely ever to find employment, and his movements will be restricted and monitored. Worse still he would always be in danger of being put to death in some of the other Emirates which uphold the UAE Article 354 of the Federal Penal Code states, "Whoever commits rape on a female or sodomy with a male shall be punished by death.""

"In my view as well as sources of GME within the Emirates, not granting asylum and deporting Zac to Abu Dhabi would mean loss of freedom as well as a serious threat to his well being and even his life."
In 2005, twenty-six young men were arrested at an Abu Dhabi hotel. They initially faced government-ordered hormone treatments.

In January we reported on the arrest of two gay men in Dubai. According to court documents one of the defendants was entrapped by a 'cybercrimes investigator' in an online chat room. One of the men was sentenced to three years imprisonment.

A source in Kuwait (via Gay Middle East) told us that online entrapment by the state in common in countries around the Gulf. "In Oman, for example, they use it to blackmail foreigners into extending their work contracts," he said.

In 2007 Dubai police initially treated sixteen year old French Swiss boy Alexandre Robert who had been kidnapped and raped as a suspect. The worry that a case was being built against Alexandre as an illegal homosexual led his family to leave the country on the advice of the French consul. His mother subsequently set up the website boycottdubai.com

Zac told LGF that the Sun's report was full of inaccuracies. It claimed that he was desperately using the show to stay in the UK and describes him as a “failed asylum seeker” who has had his application “rejected”.
“They say my case has failed, but it hasn’t. They say I ought to be on my way back to the Middle East, but I’ve been told by the Home Office that I’m not allowed to leave the UK”.

“They say I use the programme to get asylum. I didn’t, my case is strong. I auditioned because I love singing. Taking part in the show wouldn’t change anything about my case.”
Zac's legal representative Dr Edward Mynott told us that although his original claim was rejected on the basis that he was not known to anyone who could harm him in the UAE an appeal has been lodged, the asylum tribunal has accepted that Zac is gay and last week's Supreme Court decision on the so-called 'discretion test' "has clarified the legal approach and will be relevant to any consideration of our client's case."
"Our client has never used his involvement in X Factor as a basis for his asylum claim,"said Mynott.

"Our client is shocked by the public disclosure of his personal information and we fear that the disclosure has exacerbated the risk to him." 
Zac grew up in the most conservative Emirate Abu Dhabi but came to the UK with his mother in 2004. He ran away last year when she found out he is gay, then the Home Office relocated him to Liverpool. Here he says he has grown in confidence and is a different person thanks to the support of local agencies like the Young Persons Advisory Service.

Zac told LGF:
“I miss my mum a lot. It’s hard to be without family. I’ve been sick and thought if only my mum was with me, it’s the same when I see kids at college with their parents. I wish I had her support. She’s got a good heart but when it comes to sexuality it’s all wrong.  I don’t blame her – it’s our religion. I’ve tried to change, but I can’t.”
In Liverpool, Zac says he has the “love and support” of a long term boyfriend and good friends, so was horrified to read the negative comments posted by readers of The Sun online such as, “get him out before he takes any more of the government’s money” and “next plane out good riddance”.

Zac told LGF he was dismayed and hurt by the comments:
“I’ve not done anything wrong. I know some asylum seekers aren’t for real. They make me sound like I am an animal. I’m not begging. My mother pays taxes. I would work but the government won’t let us. I try hard to save money”.
LGBT Asylum News spoke with X Factor producers Talkback Thames for comment on Zac's claims and subsequently emailed the following questions:
  • Is Zac correct that his real identity was supplied by a marketing company for X Factor to The Sun?
  • If this was the case was the danger to him as a gay asylum seeker from the UAE considered?
  • If this was the case were any details regarding his asylum case in information released to The Sun?
~~~~~~~~

This interview with Zac was for a film and web project called 'BreakOUT'.



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Monday, 28 December 2009

Government is exploiting weak asylum-seekers, says Archbishop of York



Source: The Times

By Ruth Gledhill and Richard Ford

The Archbishop of York has criticised policy on asylum-seekers, warning that cuts in financial support will leave many of them destitute this Christmas.

In an article in today’s Times, John Sentamu accuses the Government of exploiting the weak by making it more difficult for asylum-seekers to make a repeat claim to stay in Britain.

He also condemns the reduction in benefits given to single asylum-seekers to £5 a day. He said that this “meagre” sum was the same amount he received when he arrived in Britain in 1974 after fleeing from Idi Amin’s Uganda.

The Government reduced the benefit for single asylum-seekers over 25 from £42.16 a week to £35.15 in October, bringing it in line with the amount given to under-25s. The allowance will be credited to a card rather than given in cash, restricting where and when it can be spent.

“It won’t be possible to carry money over from one week to the next, or even buy clothes in charity shops,” Dr Sentamu said. “These new arrangements will make it even more difficult for people already struggling to find enough to pay for food and other essentials. There must be a better way.”

New rules mean that people who claimed asylum before March 2007 and have been refused can no longer make second asylum applications by post. They must apply in person in Liverpool or at reporting centres. The Government says that the intention is to deter people from making repeated claims, but Dr Sentamu said that it imposed an unnecessary burden on some people.

Phil Woolas, the Immigration Minister, said yesterday that asylum-seekers typically lived in UK Border Agency accommodation and so had no housing costs or water, gas or electricity bills. “In view of the difficult economic climate, support rates were reviewed this year to ensure that essential living needs of asylum-seekers could be met within budgetary constraints,” he said.

Sir Andrew Green, of MigrationWatch, said: “The Archbishop is surely right to call for compassion and there may be areas where this is needed, but the queues of asylum-seekers at Calais suggest that we are already regarded as a favoured destination.”

~~~~~~

No room at the inn? We can still be hospitable

Source: The Times

By John Sentamu

There is a grace said in Yorkshire after dinner that could well be spoken in homes up and down the land this Christmas:

“Thank you Lord for what we’ve had/ It could ha’ been better, but times is bad.”

We are in a time of recession, and for many homes in Britain this means hard times now and hard times to come. There is one group of vulnerable people who possibly do not get as much sympathetic coverage as others, and I hope that, with me, you will spare a thought for them this Christmas.

Asylum seekers who find themselves destitute and struggling to survive with little or no means of support are our society’s “living ghosts”.

Parallels can be drawn between those seeking sanctuary today, who often have to endure successive trials and indignities, and Mary and Joseph. They were displaced within their country for the Roman census, only to then become refugees with their newborn son, Jesus, seeking protection in Egypt from Herod’s tyranny. In each case we see displaced people struggling to relate to complex obstacles and bureaucracies.

In the run-up to an election, political parties compete with each other to show who can be toughest on immigration. The destitution experienced by some asylum seekers will easily be overlooked. “No room at the inn” will be all too real for those awaiting removal at the UK Border Agency’s detention centres, including families with young children. I am thankful that in 1974, when I fled Idi Amin’s terror in Uganda, there was room in this country’s inn for my wife Margaret and I.

But I have a lot of time for the innkeeper. He was under tremendous pressure. Bethlehem was heaving with people, and it wasn’t his fault that there were no rooms left. What he did was generous and compassionate within the bounds of what was possible.

According to Luke, the Roman census required everyone to travel to their town of birth, and Joseph, as head of his family, had to bring his heavily pregnant wife with him, despite the inconvenience, to the city of David. Rules were rules, and someone in Mary’s condition was not exempt from this edict.

It has been my privilege to be engaged recently in discussions at the Home Office between the Still Human Still Here coalition and staff from the UK Border Agency. I have to say that those from the agency whom I have met, have been, in many ways, remarkably like the innkeeper of Bethlehem. They have been working under pressure. They have had a problem with numbers: too many people, too many applicants, and a limited capacity. Nonetheless, they declare themselves determined to act with compassion and genuinely to seek the protection of the vulnerable. For that I thank God. It is all too easy, under pressure, to put up the barriers and think only of ourselves, our own stresses and strains, and to forget the stranger at the gates.

Lately, however, I am disappointed to have to say that there have been two very discouraging developments.

Back in October, new arrangements were announced for asylum seekers whose first applications were made before March 5, 2007, and have since been refused. These individuals now have to travel in person to the UKBA office in Liverpool if they wish to make a further submission. There is no funding available to cover their travel costs, and in many cases the bill is picked up by local churches and other charities.

While this may not pose particular problems for healthy single people, there are others for whom this is an unnecessary burden. They may not have to travel to Liverpool by donkey, but the demand must seem as unreasonable as that which forced Joseph to bundle the heavily pregnant Mary so unceremoniously from one end of the country to the other.

Surely there must be scope for a little compassion here? Could not special arrangements be made for those who are, like Mary, visibly pregnant? Or for unaccompanied asylum-seeking children? Or, indeed, families with young children? Or for those who, for one reason or another, are not able-bodied? In the name of God, why not? It is argued that this will deter those who do not have serious protection needs from making further submissions, but I seriously doubt it will. If a person wants to stay in the UK, he or she will push his or her case as far as possible, and will not be deterred. But the strong should not exploit the desperation of the weak.

My second serious concern is both with the quantity and the manner of financial support now being offered to these very vulnerable people. Before October, single asylum seekers over the age of 25 were receiving benefits of £42.16 a week:

30 per cent less than a single person over the age of 25 resident in the UK. But in October this was cut to £35.15 a week, leaving asylum seekers only £5 a day to live on. That was the same amount of money I received from Ridley Hall theological college when I arrived here to study in 1974. The cost of living then was low.

Unlike other UK residents, asylum seekers are not permitted to work. Previously, payments were made in vouchers that people could exchange for cash at local voluntary groups, which were often run by churches. The UKBA is now bringing in a scheme that credits this meagre allowance to a card that will restrict where and when it can be spent.

It won’t be possible to carry money over from one week to the next, or even buy clothing in charity shops. Those living far from the shops cannot use their cards on the buses, so they have to walk. These new arrangements will make it even more difficult for people already struggling to find enough to pay for food and other essentials. There must be a better way.

The Christmas Gospel clearly spells out for us the message of peace and goodwill to men and women everywhere. At York Minster tomorrow, I shall be celebrating this message with two or three thousand others.

More than 2,000 years on, people are still on the move, pushed from pillar to post, facing destitution and uncertainty. Let us show, like the innkeeper, compassion and hospitality this Christmas.


John Sentamu is Archbishop of York

Wednesday, 9 September 2009

UK Asylum-seekers hit by huge rise in homelessness

There are over 100 million homeless people in ...Image via Wikipedia

Source: The Independent

By Emily Dugan

The number of homeless and destitute asylum-seekers has soared over the past year, according to refugee charities. In some places the number of inquiries from destitute asylum-seekers has doubled since 2008. Charities and faith groups say they are struggling to meet the demand.

"We have seen a disturbing increase in destitution across the country, and it is affecting people at all stages of the asylum process," Sandy Buchan, the chief executive of Refugee Action, said. "While the Home Office should be applauded for speeding up the process, we are concerned that unless properly managed it can leave people with little time to lodge an appeal and find a solicitor to help them."

Research shows that cities such as Glasgow, Manchester, Leicester and Nottingham are inundated with asylum-seekers no longer supported by the state. Their benefits are withdrawn after their asylum applications are turned down. Up to one in four later win their appeals but the process can take a long time, during which they struggle to support themselves, and many are forced on to the streets.

Refugee Action says the number of visits from destitute asylum-seekers almost doubled in a year at their drop-in centres in Portsmouth, Plymouth, Leicester, Nottingham, Manchester and Liverpool. Between April and June 2008 they had 1,699 contacts from penniless asylum-seekers; over the same period in 2009 the number was 3,082.

Experts say the new asylum process, designed to speed up applications, is partly to blame for the greater numbers of failed asylum-seekers left homeless. "We would like to see all applicants given the time and support to find legal representation and receive a full and fair hearing. Making asylum-seekers destitute pushes them further to the margins of society and makes it less likely that their cases will be resolved," Ms Buchan said.

Robina Qureshi, the director of Positive Action in Housing, a Glasgow charity, said she had been shocked by the increase in the number of asylum-seekers coming to them for shelter. "We've encountered a 25 per cent increase this year in the number of people who are destitute, many of whom are pregnant women and children," she said. "Clearly the Government's policy of starving people out of the country isn't working, so the problem has landed at doors like ours."

The Home Office insists that it "provides measures to ensure that individuals are not destitute".


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Tuesday, 16 June 2009

Destitute and forgotten - the legacy of the UK's asylum rules


By Sara Ayech:

Refugee Week is a celebration of the contribution of refugees to our society, their courage and resilience, and everything they have done to make Britain the fantastic and culturally diverse place it is today. But in the midst of these celebrations we need to remember and stand up for a group of people who have been left out in the cold.

People who are refused asylum in the UK are given 21 days before they must leave their accommodation and all support for them is cut off. In the context of imminent homelessness they are expected to leave the UK immediately. However, many are from countries such as Iraq, Afghanistan, Eritrea and Zimbabwe, where there are ongoing conflicts and widespread, indiscriminate human rights abuses. Unsurprisingly, they are terrified of returning home. Others have physical or mental health problems, and many feel that they have not had adequate legal assistance in making their asylum case, so can have little faith in the decision that has been made.

As a result up to 300,000 refused asylum seekers remain in the UK, often homeless and destitute, relying on friends and charities for support, or forced into illegal and exploitative work such as prostitution, just to survive. As Rzgar, a Refugee Action caseworker in Liverpool says "sometimes clients receive help from the community and friends or family, however, these days - in the recession - there is little people can offer and frequently they are not able to provide support any more."

As you can imagine sleeping on the street frequently has a detrimental impact on both their physical and mental wellbeing. In his work Rzgar finds that "if they suffer from a medical condition it is easy to miss the times when medication should be taken or - with no address - there are difficulties in accessing their medication. Some clients are HIV positive and need to receive certain medication which must be stored in cool conditions - this is not possible if a client sleeps in the street."

Refugee Action, as part of the Still Human Still Here campaign, is fighting for an end to the current policy of destitution. We are calling for asylum seekers to be supported until they either receive refugee status or are able to return home, and for them to be allowed to work and have full access to healthcare.

To find out more watch our powerful film on You Tube, featuring interviews with long-term destitute asylum seekers.



Source

Friday, 29 May 2009

PR and the selling of border controls



By Jon Burnett

Jon Burnett analyses a recent Sky TV series, UK Border Force, which portrayed the work of the UK Border Agency.

In 2008, the Home Office paid £400,000 to Steadfast Television,[1] an independent production company, to help fund a documentary for Sky TV on UK border control. The programme, according to Sky, was 'a revealing new documentary series which takes you behind the scenes at Heathrow Terminal 3, Calais, Dover and out and about with diligent enforcement teams - all cracking down on illegal immigrants.'[2]

In turn, Steadfast suggested that viewers would be shown the 'battle to stem the tide of illegal entries'.[3] In exchange for payment, exclusive access to the inner workings of the UK's mechanisms of border policing was granted. Camera crews were allowed to follow enforcement teams as they raided homes and workplaces, officers checking lorries in Calais, and immigration officers interviewing those who wished to enter the country. Staff at the UK Border Agency (UKBA)[4] explained their jobs in detail, discussing their work and its aims.

New Labour has channelled significant energy and resources into transforming the immigration and asylum system in recent years, with Minister of State for Borders and Immigration, Phil Woolas, stating, last year, that 2008 would see 'the biggest shake up of our border security and immigration system in its history'.[5] This documentary then provided an ideal vehicle through which to propagate particular images of the state at a time of restructuring. It provided a clear opportunity to portray the work of UKBA and the programme was overseen on behalf of the Home Office by the Central Office of Information (COI).[6]

It was inevitable, then, that suspicion of bias would emerge. And this was buttressed by growing controversy over the fact that the £400,000 spent on this programme was only one part of a wider £2 million that had been spent by the government on sponsoring other 'documentaries'. Ofcom was concerned enough to investigate whether broadcast codes had been breached. And in this context, on 15 September 2008, it was reported that Sky had given the £400,000 back, claiming that viewers needed to be assured that the programme was 'wholly independent'.[7] A gesture that might have carried more credibility were it not for the fact that the series had already begun.

UK Border Force was an eight-part series that aired between September and October 2008. Each one-hour episode followed the work of the UKBA and focused interchangeably upon the role of enforcement teams, juxtaposed immigration controls in France, the work of staff at Heathrow airport, and visa controls in India.[8] Throughout, the underlying narrative was of the routine manner in which the state refuses entry, targets, raids, stops and searches, detains, and deports those who are in breach of (or suspected of being in breach of) immigration and asylum laws. Viewers were shown close-up images of people breaking down in tears, threatening to end their own lives, fleeing from enforcement teams, and emerging bewildered and confused from their attempted modes of transport into the UK as they were caught and turned away. That their own narratives - those who are described in the programme at various points as 'illegals', 'clandestines', and 'human traffic jams' - remain unexplored is indicative of immigration and asylum policy. 'As far is the law is concerned', one immigration officer bluntly explains, 'there is no flexibility'.

Offshore border controls

British immigration officers are stationed at 135 different countries worldwide in order to 'vet those who want to travel'. Under the doctrine of managed migration their role is to regulate migration flows at the point of departure and, according to one immigration officer, 'We are trying to stop people in the first place who have no right to go'.

Research by the Refugee Council has drawn attention to the manner in which the New Labour government seeks to place more emphasis on pre-entry controls. And these take on a variety of guises, including the imposition of carrier sanctions of airlines that transport 'inadequately documented passengers', referring 'irregular' passengers to local authorities and gathering information on immigration trends. One of the impacts of such practices, according to the Refugee Council, is the refoulement of asylum seekers in need of protection. But in a legal challenge against the UK's use of 'pre-entrance controls' in Prague in 2001, the immigration service asserted that the government was 'not obliged under the 1951 Refugee Convention to consider applications outside the UK, nor to facilitate travel to the UK for the purpose of applying for asylum'.[9] At the same time EU externalised border controls force thousands of people into 'irregular migration' by, effectively, closing down routes for 'legal' travel. It is in this context that people are forced to use other forms of transport including boats and through the use of people smugglers.

None of this is explored in UK Border Force where cameras film immigration offices in Delhi that administer 8,000 applications to travel to the UK a week. Cameras film a range of applicants as they are questioned and cross-examined by officials. One man, for example, is refused a visa as he does not have as much money as he claims in his bank account. 'The fact that you've submitted false documents means I can't believe anything you say', he is told. This is reported without question. As is the fact that the police are called and he is banned from entering the UK for ten years. Like all applicants to the UK from Delhi since 2007, he has his fingerprints and photograph taken and stored in a database which, if the figure of 8,000 applications a week is correct, adds 416,000 people to its files a year. Similarly, a student who has paid £4,500 in order to study in the UK is refused entry as he does not have sufficient grasp of English and cannot answer certain questions. The whole process, in which he loses the fees he has paid, is administered with unswerving efficiency. The reasons why people wanted to leave India are never questioned. Rather, the programme suggests that 'The visa system acts as a filter and strict border controls stop people getting in the country illegally'.

Without any concept of how distinctions between 'legal' and 'illegal' migration are created, or indeed the interests these distinctions serve, UK Border Force is reduced to merely reproducing these distinctions as fact. Juxtaposed immigration controls in Calais are observed faithfully: reported as a line of defence valiantly preventing those whom the narrator describes as the 'clandestine community' from entering the UK. So we are told that of the 5,000 trucks a day that pass through Calais, three-quarters of them are checked for people. We are told that by doing so 12,000 people were prevented from entering the UK in 2007. But at no point does the programme seriously question the terrible conditions in the makeshift camps dotted around the port in which those who are desperate to enter exist. 'If you don't catch them you don't feel like your doing your job', one immigration officer explains. And considerable time is spent showing them 'doing their job'.

Carbon dioxide probes - specially designed devices that detect breathing - are portrayed as a vital tool in the detection of those who try and enter the UK. The immigration officers are meticulous and there is no doubt that they are effective. Close up images show people caught in the back of lorries and vans; behind boxes and beneath pallets and, at one point, 'buried amongst the tyres'. In the latter example, seven people are found hidden in a vehicle just before it is about to board a ferry to the UK. 'Look guys. So close', one of the immigration officers exclaims.

The exact number of migrants who have suffocated whilst in transit, trying to enter the UK, is unknown. Aside from incidents where there are mass casualties - such as the suffocation of fifty-eight Chinese people in a van entering Dover in 2000 - there is little interest from the mainstream media. But a Vietnamese family who are filmed with plastic bags tied over their heads, in a desperate attempt to avoid the carbon dioxide probes, may well have come dangerously close to adding to this number. 'I personally don't have an opinion whilst at work as to the reasons they are coming', one immigration officer remarks. It is a view that UK Border Force follows fastidiously.

Terminal Three - Heathrow airport

Heathrow airport was opened in 1946 and is recognised as the busiest airport in the world. Every year 66.9 million people pass through its jurisdiction, and it plays an intrinsic role in enforcing UK immigration laws and policies. It is no coincidence that the Joint Council for the Welfare of Immigrants (JCWI), set up in 1967 as a welfare service assisting those entering the UK who were made the target of discriminatory immigration laws, initially based itself there.

UK Border Force films immigration officers at Heathrow airport as they process applications to the UK, and painstakingly records their work cross-examining, questioning, and ensuring the removal of those who they suspect of breaking immigration laws. 'Many passengers are from the worlds poorest countries', the programme asserts, and one man who is stopped, held for a period and questioned recognises that poverty, in itself, appears to be a cause for suspicion. 'This is just because I am poor', he claims of his treatment. Not once does the programme even begin to examine the legacies of colonialism and imperialism through which countries have maintained their dominance through extrapolating wealth from other countries.

The United Nations has suggested that the EU needs at least 20 million non-EU migrants by 2020 in order to sustain its economy. Such predictions, in part, have underpinned the efforts of member states in creating and streamlining various types of routes and entitlements (or indeed lack of) for migrants who take up employment. At the same time, significant resources are channelled into ensuring that those who are not deemed desirable by governmental targets and dictates are denied entry and removed. According to the former Home Secretary Charles Clarke, '[t]he UK needs a world class migration system to attract the brightest and the best from across the world'.[10] It can be presumed that one woman from Cape Town, who is stopped and tells the officers that she wants to study on a beauty training course, is not seen to fit into these requirements. She has no money, but has a number of CVs and, as such, the Heathrow staff conclude that she is trying to enter the UK in order to work. Eventually, the woman begins to cry, offering that she has to support her whole family and that this is 'her only break'. In a bizarre scene one of the immigration officers appears to express a level of sympathy for the woman's plight; explaining that they have been to Cape Town and suggesting 'it's pretty horrible'. Regardless, the woman is made to return there. 'She falls well short of the requirements for entry', viewers are told. Whilst an immigration officer acknowledges that they are 'robbing her of her chance to help her family'.

It is presumably women like this that former Prime Minister Tony Blair referred to, in 2004, when he stated, 'We will neither be Fortress Britain, nor will we be an open house. Where necessary we will tighten the immigration system. Where there are abuses we will deal with them, so that public support for the controlled migration that benefits Britain will be maintained.'[11]

And UK Border Force offers a conduit through which such images of border controls can be displayed - without question.

In another example a Pakistani man who claims to be a student is suspected of lying about his course and questioned about what tube route he uses to get to college. He is unable to answer. When contacted, the college that he says he has been studying at confirms that he has not attended since 2007. 'He's played the game', an immigration officer working on the case claims. He is told that he will be removed to Pakistan, but that he has a right of appeal which extends to twenty-eight days if he leaves, or five days if he chooses to remain. If he takes the latter option, it is explained to him that he will be placed in detention and appealing in this way 'is a waste of taxpayers' money'. This, it appears, is the main priority and such is the manner in which a decision on one individual's future is made. When an American citizen, born in Jamaica tells one immigration officer at Heathrow that 'my life is right here in your hands', the answer is instant, and unequivocal. 'That's right', he replies.

Enforcement teams

In all of the ways identified above, UK Border Force grants viewers up close access to the work of immigration officers as they implement policies designed, in part, to prevent entry into the UK. But the footage does not stop there. Considerable time is spent filming the work of immigration officers as they raid homes and workplaces in a hunt for those whose presence is deemed 'irregular'. 'Preventing people who come here illegally is one thing', the programme narrates. 'Tracking down those who have slipped through the net is another. That's where the enforcement team comes in.'

The resources that have been put into tracking down irregular migrants are considerable. Manpower has increased substantially, and information sharing between a variety of agencies is unprecedented. Some (although, as we shall see below not all) of the work of the enforcement teams is based, ostensibly, on intelligence and it is explained that one particular centre in Manchester receives 1,000 'tip-offs' a week.[12] Many of these relate to people working without permission and the officers raid workplaces to catch workers in their jobs. Officers enter a restaurant on the basis of such 'intelligence' in one example and, after breaking some of the furniture (albeit accidentally) they learn that one of the people they are looking for does not actually work in the business. The others have permission to work. Neither the stigmatising effect on the business (there are customers eating as the raid takes place), the fear generated by such events, nor the source of the information are questioned or explored in any way. Rather, the raid is treated as an entertaining slip-up.

In its refusal to ask or even acknowledge some of the broader questions relating to the politics of immigration raids, UK Border Force purges any form of context apart from that which the UK Border Agency seeks to portray. That the raid above is based on fundamentally flawed intelligence is irrelevant to the programme because it is unimportant to the officers who carry it out. They simply move on to another target. In Liverpool, enforcement teams raid another restaurant and, this time, catch people. 'It all ends in tears', one officer explains as one of the workers breaks down on camera. 'It ends in tears for businesses who go to the wall because these people undercut them.'

It is this notion of undercutting 'good' business that plays such an intrinsic role in the government's concerted drive to combat undocumented working through criminalisation. It is a simplistic vision in which businesses can be split into 'good' and 'bad'; with the latter employing workers illegally. In practice, this division appears to be underpinned by ethnicity, with the UKBA targeting ethnic minority owned businesses 'whose visibility on the High Street makes them easy targets for a policy driven by numbers' in an ongoing series of raids and operations.[13] The Home Office displays this information proudly, and 'names and shames' businesses that are caught employing people in contravention of immigration legislation. The list of the names of employers and their businesses who have received civil penalties are updated regularly on the Home Office website and, as the Home Office makes clear, these names are also circulated to 'local media organisations, such as local newspapers and broadcast news media'.[14]

What these naming and shaming lists also reveal, however, is that almost no companies who sub-contract labour are brought to public attention. Between May 2008 and January 2009, these lists publicised over 230 businesses, many of which were found to be employing multiple workers.[15] Not once though do they mention companies such as major supermarkets that routinely utilise products made by exploited labour. As stated above, it is the easiest targets that are beleaguered. This is reflected in UK Border Force as immigration officers are frequently filmed entering small businesses. 'Lets rock and roll' asserts one officer before raiding an Asian butchers shop in London. In Essex, people washing cars are caught and officers go to their shared house to check their identity documents. Upon finding an overdue library book an officer 'jokes' that 'if we can't nick him for immigration offences we'll arrest him for his library fine'. Raids are conducted with the use of fingerprint scanners so that an individual's immigration status can be verified immediately on a centralised database. Results come back in minutes.

Where UKBA does raid larger businesses, such as a chicken factory in the Midlands, officers uncover torrid conditions. Sixty workers are found and they have their mobile phones taken from them to ensure that 'protesters can't cause a nuisance'. Nineteen people are arrested. At a spring onion farm in Worcestershire elderly workers employed by an agency are found in, as one immigration officer states, 'conditions you wouldn't keep an animal in'. Two of the people tell how they sold their house and land to get to the UK. Undocumented working is frequently exploitative, and often involves working in conditions where injuries are high and mechanisms of redress are practically non-existent.[16] Yet, as the commentary for UK Border Force accurately explains, 'Although employment regulations are being broken, the enforcement teams job is to identify and remove "illegals''.' Indeed, at the same time as resources and manpower targeted at arresting 'immigration offenders' there has been a withdrawal of agencies involved in the investigation and prosecution of breaches of health and safety law.[17] Undocumented workers are investigated, portrayed, and 'processed' (in the language of UK Border Force) quite simply as offenders; with little reference to the reasons why they are working in such conditions, or their role in an increasingly 'flexibilised' labour force that the government so readily demands.

Research by the Institute of Race Relations has revealed an increase in deaths caused by immigration raids in 2008.[18] And history has shown that such activities have frequently led to injuries and harm. Yet in a remarkable feat of self-censorship these concerns are omitted completely by UK Border Force. This is despite the use of footage of enforcement teams involved in openly discriminatory 'street operations'. These operations have been ongoing since 2006, and the programme tells us that in London an average of three are carried out a week. They are based, quite unequivocally, on coercion. Enforcement teams travel to busy locations (such as train stations) and stand visibly so as to gauge, in the words of one officer, 'how people react to our presence'. According to UK Border Force the operations are designed to focus on 'anyone who looks suspicious', and any person who reacts nervously to the presence of Enforcement Teams; or, judging by the footage, anyone who is not White, may be stopped and made to verify their immigration status. 'These type of operations, we don't come away with an empty van', remarks one immigration officer. One man is chased by the Enforcement Teams, held down to the floor in full public view, and told he is 'under arrest under suspicion of entering the country illegally, or committing an immigration offence'. When a Black member of public confronts the officers he is told by one of them to 'get your hands out of my face'. In turn, he is put in handcuffs himself and released later on. At Stratford station, two arrests are made in the first hour of an operation and seven throughout the day. One of the arrests is of a Nigerian man who overstayed his visa working at a charity. 'Viewers are told that '[t]he life he made for himself in this country will soon be over'.

State propaganda?

There can be little doubt that UK Border Force acted at the very least as a wholly favorable public relations exercise for the UK Border Agency. This is a remarkable achievement, given that the footage displayed (at different times) immigration officers shattering people's dreams, shouting in peoples faces and smashing through peoples doors. What is equally remarkable, however, is the fact that the media can act so readily as little short of government propaganda. It would be naive to suggest that this was solely as a result of financial backing (the money, after all, was actually returned); or indeed because of editorial control by the Central Office of Information. Rather, UK Border Force portrayed an alliance of shared political and media visions of the work of the state.[19] The programme showed UKBA as UKBA (and no doubt Sky) wanted it to be shown. In turn, it generated high viewing figures of nearly a quarter of a million in its first episode alone.

Some of the immigration officers shown on the programme evidently enjoyed their work. An immigration officer interviewed by The Metro last year explained quite simply that she 'liked the idea of going out and using our power of arrest' and that 'raids are fun'.[20] Others openly displayed sympathy for those whom they removed from the country, but removed them anyway. The point is that whether administered enthusiastically or sympathetically the end result, often, was the same. UK Border Force shows, but never questions that through the edicts of immigration and asylum law and policy global inequalities are maintained at a cost of human misery. Instead, ultimately, such workings of the state are on television as a macabre form of human entertainment.

At the time of writing, UK Border Force is currently re-running on Sky (Freeview), and a second series is in production.

Footnotes: [1] Steadfast Television was set up as part of Apace Media PLC in 2005 and its programmes include CCTV: you are being watched, Sky Cops, Cars Cops and Criminals, and Brit Cops: Frontline Crime. [2] Sky, 'UK Border Force: The Front Line', Sky TV, (Downloaded 27 April, 2009), http://sky1.sky.com/uk-border-force-exciting-new-series-takes-you-behind-the-scenes [3] Steadfast International, Border Force, (London, Steadfast International, 2008). [4] UKBA was established in April 2008, bringing together the work of the Border and Immigration Agency, and parts of Her Majesty's Revenue and Customs (HMRC), and the Foreign and Commonwealth Office. [5] Liam Byrne, 'The case for a new migration system', Speech to the Local Government Association, (6 February, 2008), http://press.homeoffice.gov.uk/Speeches/sp-lb-lga-feb-08 [6] Darren Davidson, 'Sky hands back Home Office payment for AFP series', Brand Republic, (15 September, 2008), http://www.brandrepublic.com/News/845936/Sky-hands-back-Home-Office-payment-AFP-series/ [7] Ibid. [8] UKBA Central Stakeholder Team, Update on key migration &border issues of interest to stakeholders, (London, Home Office, 2008). [9] Sile Reynolds and Helen Muggeridge, Remote Controls: How UK border controls are endangering the lives of refugees, (London, Refugee Council, 2008), p. 38. [10] Charles Clarke, 'Foreword', in Home Office, A Points Based System: Making Migration Work for Britain, (London, Home Office, 2006). [11] Cited in Home Office, Selective Admission: Making Migration Work for Britain, (London, Home Office, 2005), para. 4.8. [12] The Home Office encourages individuals to contact them if they suspect that a person's presence in the UK breaks immigration law, or if they suspect that a business is employing people who do not have permission to work. [13] Frances Webber, 'Crusade against the undocumented' IRR News, (5 February, 2009) http://www.irr.org.uk/2009/february/ha000011.html; See also Migrants Rights News, 'Special Bulletin', Migrants Rights News, June, London: Migrants Rights News, 2008). [14] UK Border Agency, Publication of non-compliant employer details, (London: Home Office, 2008). [15] See http://ukba.homeoffice.gov.uk/sitecontent/documents/employersandsponsors/listemployerspenalties/ [16] Jon Burnett and David Whyte, The wages of fear: risk, safety and undocumented work, (Leeds and Liverpool, PAFRAS and the University of Liverpool, 2009, Forthcoming). [17] Steve Tombs and David Whyte, The Crisis in Enforcement: the decriminilsation of death and injury at work, (London, Crime and Society Foundation, 2008). [18] Cited in Frances Webber, 'Crusade against the undocumented' IRR News, (5 February, 2009) http://www.irr.org.uk/2009/february/ha000011.html [19] Sky TV broadcast the programme and has frequently pressurised governments to pursue the political objectives of its founder, Rupert Murdoch. See for example Nick Davies, Flat Earth News, (London, Vintage Books, 2009), pp. 20-1. [20] Cited in A Williams, (2008) 'My life on the border', Metro, (23 September, 2008), p. 17.
The Institute of Race Relations is precluded from expressing a corporate view: any opinions expressed are therefore those of the authors.

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Friday, 28 March 2008

Liverpool Echo backs Mehdi

A columnist in the Liverpool Echo, that city's major newspaper, has called for 'Justice for Mahdi'

OCCASIONALLY we need to make a noise. Life isn’t just about the party. Our lifestyle choices, the people we choose to love, can seem unimportant in a society with laws to protect us.

But life for gays in Iran is very different. Homosexual acts are illegal in the Islamic republic. This attitude has led to executions of gay men

Three years on and gay Iranian Mahdi Kazemi, 19, is fighting deportation to Iran from the UK.

Last week the ECHO reported that Mahdi was granted a reprieve by home secretary Jacqui Smith. Now it’s up to the UK government to decide whether Madhi will be deported.

Have your say, via petition and protest. For more information visit www.madhikazemi.com

Wednesday, 19 March 2008

Home Office statements in the Lords

6,242 signatures on the iPetition
2,012 signatures on the Downing Street petition

From the Lords today:

Lord Roberts of Llandudno (Liberal Democrat)
asked Her Majesty's Government:
What their policy is on removals to Iran.
Lord West of Spithead (Parliamentary Under-Secretary (Security and Counter-terrorism), Home Office):
My Lords, we recognise that there are individuals from Iran who are able to demonstrate a need for international protection, and it is only right that we provide protection to those in genuine fear of persecution. However, enforcing the return of those who have no right to remain here is a key part of upholding a robust and fair asylum system.
Lord Roberts:
My Lords, I am not sure whether or not I thank the Minister for that reply. I thank the 80 Members of this House who last week joined me in the appeal on behalf of the young Iranian whose deportation has been delayed. I thank the Home Secretary for her response.
When people are forcibly removed from the UK, what mechanism is there to monitor the treatment they receive in their homeland? How do we keep an eye on that? And is it not time, in spite of the Minister's Answer, that we joined other countries in having a moratorium on forced return not only to Iran but to other places where folk are persecuted, tortured and possibly even executed?
Lord West:
My Lords, it is worth saying that we are not aware of any individual who has been executed in Iran in recent years solely on the grounds of homosexuality, and we do not consider that there is systematic persecution of gay men in Iran. However, we have said in our most recent operational guidance note that if a claimant can demonstrate that their homosexual acts have brought them to the attention of the authorities to the extent that they will face a real risk of punishment that will be harsh and will amount to persecution, they should be granted refugee status as a member of a particular social group. In addition, gay rights activists who have come to the attention of the authorities face a real risk of persecution, and they should be granted asylum as well.
Lord Alton of Liverpool (Crossbench):
My Lords, is the Minister aware that in the past 30 years some 120,000 members of the Iranian Resistance have been executed, including women and children? Is he further aware that in this week's elections more than 1,000 reformist candidates were prevented from standing, their newspapers were closed down and they were refused permission to hold public meetings? Given those circumstances and the need to encourage democracy and change in Iran, how can the Government justify the continued decision to proscribe the Iranian Resistance, a decision that our own judges have described as, to use their word, perverse?
Lord West:
My Lords, that is a bit beyond the Question being asked. On the issue of the returning of gay people to Iran, we have concerns about the treatment of gays in that country. The FCO and NGOs monitor what is happening in Iran, and we are not aware of any individual having been executed solely on the grounds of homosexuality.
Lord Corbett of Castle Vale:
My Lords, can the Minister confirm that there have been 57 critical reports in the United Nations about the repressive nature of the mullahs' regime in Iran? The abuses of human rights include the amputation of limbs without anaesthetics, the gouging out of eyes, the hanging of convicted minors from the ends of cranes in public and the death penalty for those convicted of homosexuality. Will the Minister take the opportunity to speak to any one of 200 Members of your Lordships' House who share my views on this vile regime if he needs any other evidence that it is unsafe to return asylum seekers to that regime?
Lord West:
My Lords, I return to what I said: we are not aware of any individual having been executed solely on the grounds of homosexuality in Iran, and we are not aware of any that we have returned having been executed.
Baroness Warsi (Conservative):
My Lords, is the Minister aware of discrepancies between in-country information provided in briefs by the Foreign Office and reports produced by Amnesty and Human Rights Watch about the situation in Iran? If the Minister accepts that there are such discrepancies and that our information is not entirely correct, how can our decisions possibly be correct?
Lord West:
My Lords, I am going by the information provided, I admit, by the Foreign Office in conjunction with some NGOs. We have no evidence of anyone we have sent back being executed, and we would never send someone back who we felt was in danger of being executed. That is our position with any country in the world; we just do not do that.
Lord Avebury (Liberal Democrat) :
My Lords, further to the point raised by the noble Baroness, is the Minister aware that the Country of Origin Information Service report on Iran, published by the Home Office, is deficient in many respects? Does he know that it omits quite a few public domain references to the persecution of gays in Iran, including in particular the execution of Makwan Mouloudzadeh, a teenager who was executed for a homosexual offence allegedly committed when he was 13? Will the noble Lord make sure that the Home Office Country of Origin Information Service updates its report and that, in particular, it looks at material in the public domain such as that which one can find on Wikipedia?
Lord West:
My Lords, I can assure the noble Lord that we will look at that. It is worth repeating that we have concerns about the treatment of gays within Iran. However, in the one case that we looked into, because it was shown on television, we found that two young males were hanged because they were found guilty of raping a 13 year-old boy. They were hanged for the offence of rape. Nevertheless, we certainly will look at the point that the noble Lord raises, as we need to do so.
Lord Wedderburn of Charlton (Crossbench) :
My Lords, can my noble friend explain how the Foreign Office has performed the miracle of having Nelson still alive in its offices with his telescope stuck to his blind eye?
Lord West:
My Lords, as a naval person I should be able to answer that. All I can say is that I will talk to my colleagues in the Foreign Office to try to ensure that we are getting the best flavour of exactly what is happening in Iran.

Sounds fairly clear that the Home Office won't give an inch until absolutely forced to - by the rest of us and when told to by the PM because the embarrassment via the media is just too great. And restating the 'rape' claims is beyond belief. Shameless. Lord Spit and Gorgeous George Galloway have much in common.

Video of the Lords session

blog post about Lord West's staemenst

Thursday, 13 March 2008

News update

Last night's BBC News 24 Report (also on News At Ten):


Following the ABC Nightly News Report, the story has now hit the right-wing blogosphere in the United States. Atlas Shrugs covers it this morning, using it as an anti-European left example:

This is where the head spins ... The left in America and Europe can't stop sucking Ahmadi-nijad, his rod and his staff.

And MTV, which will flow on to its affiliates around the world. Apart from the international gay media, it is also been reported in the past couple of days across America, in Fiji, India, France, South Africa, Austria, the Netherlands, Italy, Germany Australia, New Zealand — and Iran.

An American gay newspaper, Out In Jersey, has sent the following to Jacqui Smith:
It gives me nothing but pain to inform you that, in the event Mehdi is sent back to Iran, this publication will have no alternative but to call, loudly and frequently, for a boycott of travel to the United Kingdom. I cannot see how, in conscience, we can do otherwise.

The Independent reports that:

63 peers have signed a letter to the Home Secretary urging the Government to halt the deportation.

Among those pressing the Government to help Mr Kazemi are Lord Woolf, the former lord chief justice; Betty Boothroyd, the former speaker of the House of Commons; and Shirley Williams, Julia Neuberger, Paddy Ashdown, David Steel, Lord Lester QC and the Bishop of Liverpool, as well as a number of senior Labour peers.

It is understood that some government ministers privately support the peers' intervention, but for constitutional reasons are unable to put their names to the document.

Lord Roberts of LlandudnoThe author of the letter, the LibDem peer and Methodist Minister, Lord Roberts of Llandudno, is seeking an urgent meeting with a Home Office minister.

Baroness Scott comments that:

Roger Roberts, was collecting signatures in the Lords yesterday petitioning for Mehdi to stay in the UK. Whilst I was only too pleased to add my name, I was disappointed, to say the least, not a single Conservative could be persuaded to do so.

Madhi's Uncle, Saeed, is also quoted by the Indie:

After losing his case he is so afraid now of what might happen to him. He is living a nightmare which no young man should ever have to experience. I have been told that there is an arrest warrant in his name issued by the Iranian government police. If he goes back, his life will be in danger. I urge Ms Smith to please reconsider his case.

As is Simon Hughes MP:

As Mehdi's British MP, and someone who has been supporting him and his family since December 2006, I am prepared for Mehdi's return to the UK. As soon as Mehdi is back in the UK, I will meet him and his family and make official representations through the proper channels, with the help of the best legal support. The Home Office has assured me that they will then reconsider Mehdi's case.
Independent Opinion piece by Phillip Henshaw: There is no logic to our treatment of Mehdi Kazemi
But we're not talking about thousands of potential asylum seekers, or a situation that hasn't taken shape yet. We are talking, unfortunately, about one tragic and terrifying case, and about one 19-year-old who we are seriously proposing to send back to Iran, where he may very well be executed.

Is it entirely impossible that Mr Kazemi's case has been dealt with by officials who regard a 19-year-old homosexual, and the state of homosexuality itself, with frank distaste? It seems more than likely.

Mr Kazemi is not, by now, a case or a precedent. He is a human being in a situation that we can thank God few of us will ever face.

Dutch Radio reports that:

The European Parliament is demanding that an Iranian homosexual, currently detained in an immigration centre in the Netherlands, receive protection.

European MPs are worried that Mr Kazemi will receive the death penalty if he is sent back to Iran. They say that he must not become the victim of European bureaucracy.

The Daily Mail covers Madhi today. It quotes the Dutch Democrat MP Boris van der Ham Kamervragen, who has taken up Kazemi's case. He has tabled questions in Parliament asking the junior minister for immigration, Nebahat Albayrak, to lobby British authorities on Kazemi's behalf.

There should be some political leadership. I hope in Britain they will do it and otherwise we should take the boy.

The Mail says that Madhi is not expected to be deported before Albayrak has answered Van der Ham's questions.

This is a sample comment on the story by a Daily Mail reader:

Would either country care to have the label 'murderer' hanging over their head?

George Galloway has defended the Iranian Government and made despicable remarks concerning Madhi. Speaking on the Channel 5 TV talk show The Wright Stuff this morning

TRANSCRIPT
GG: The Independent has a story about Peers calling upon the Home Secretary to halt the deportation of a gay Iranian. In part this is being used as part of the on-going propaganda against Iran. All the papers seem to imply that you get executed in Iran for being gay. That's not true.
MW: His boyfriend was hung though, wasn't he?
GG: Yes, but nor being gay. For uh, committing sex crimes, uh, against young men.
MW: Right...
GG: I mean, I'm against execution for any reason in any place, but it is important to avoid that propaganda.
MW: So you're saying that his guy they want to deport should be deported because there is no risk of his sexuality.. or he shouldn't be deported because there is at risk?
GG: He should not be deported not least because after all this Iranian propaganda he will be accused of being the source, or one of the sources. It would be ridiculous to deport him, and I don't think he will be deported now.

Video. Galloway is contactable here.

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