Showing posts with label Theresa May. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Theresa May. Show all posts

Wednesday, 16 November 2011

In UK: Border hostilities: Passport to the media-policy merry-go-round

The UK's new Home Secretary, Theresa May, givi...Image via Wikipedia
Source: NCADC

You have most probably heard about the latest scandal at the Home Office. Basically it was about a pilot scheme to replace the blanket checks on passports of people visiting the UK with a more targeted approach, and whether the Home Secretary knew the extent to which this was being implemented by her Border Force directors.

There was the inevitable media outrage that so many of these visitors, who obviously include in their number untold illegal immigrants, terrorists etc, did not have to queue for hours at the start of their holidays, business trips, asylum/terror sprees.

Of course, media hostility to migrants is nothing new. Over at the Migrants Rights Network blog this week, John Perry reviews Malcolm Dean’s new book, Democracy Under Attack, which looks at the role of the media in driving social policy. Perry highlights the section on how policy on asylum and migration has been driven by the press.


In it’s manifesto of 1997, Labour hardly mentioned immigration as an issue. By 2002, as asylum seeking numbers peaked dueto conflict in places like Iraq and Somalia, the press began to refer to people seeking sanctuary as ‘this scum’ ‘asylum cheats’ and ‘illegals’. It was a “hostile…one-sided, often wildly inaccurate…press campaign of vilification”, according to the former editor of the Mirror. The Labour government, with a massive majority, could have resisted, but government policy followed the media line, legitimising further public hostility (perhjaps reaching it’s nadir when Phil Woolas was found guilty of deliberately setting out to stir up and exploit racial hatred in the last election campaign). And so it goes around, the media-policy merry-go-round.

Interestingly, the Theresa May passports affair has resulted in a remarkably sensible blog at the Telegraph, of all places, where Mary Riddle warns that dangerous misinformation and misguided policy statements are fuelling the next stage of a political ‘immigration war‘. It’s an interesting read. Riddel believes that much of the anti-immigrant rhetoric is built on lies, the policies unworkable, and that this will come back to bite both May and prime minister Cameron

It looks as if Theresa May will survive this row and keep her job for a while longer. It appears that she is winning, in this row at least, with the dual-argument of it wasn’t that big a deal, and anyway, it was someone else’s fault. Ironically, an argument she was very much against a few years ago when she demanded a ministerial resignation over a passports row. In 2007 Ms May was “sick and tired of government ministers who simply blame other people when things go wrong”. The Political Scrapbook blog has helpfully dug up the quotes, and remarks that the Minister in question, Beverley Hughes, did indeed resign, 21 days later.

Meanwhile, it’s business as usual for refugees seeking sanctuary who face a culture of disbelief with dwindling access to legal help. No investigations or resignations looming over the sometimes 50% error rate in asylum decisions, or the public money wasted on legal fees righting UKBA wrongs. More families are divided by ever-harsher knee-jerk immigration controls barring entry, and more children are ending up in lone parent families when a parent is deported. Not to mention the proposal to recreate in Britain the notorious migrant worker exploitation of the German Gastarbeiter programme.

In the political war over migration control, the real casualties are not government Ministers or civil servants on £60,000 a year pensions. It is the refugees, the families, the workers who suffer. The racism and xenophobia that is pervading mainstream politics, highlighted last week by John Grayson at IRR, affects our whole society.

An anti-immigrant war of words affects us all, and we all have a role to play in resisting it. As the saying goes: if you don’t like the news, go out and make your own…
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Friday, 7 October 2011

#catgate flap for UK government turning sour for gay couple at centre of it

Pic by @IamHappyToast
By Paul Canning

Since the UK Home Secretary Theresa May uttered those hostage to fortune words on Tuesday 4 October at the Conservative Party Conference ".. and I am not making this up" the British media and both opponents of the government as well as some within her own party have been making hay with her subsequent error - the supposed 'illegal immigrant' who could not be deported because "he had a pet cat".

Her claim, that a foreigner had been allowed to stay in the UK because of the human rights issues involved with owning a cat, was literally laughed at by one of her colleagues - the Justice Secretary Ken Clarke - and led to endless pussy-related headline and pictures like the one above, which a Labour MP happily retweeted. Prime Minister Cameron even made a joke about it in his speech winding up the conference.

The claim in a speech was, May admitted, sourced solely from newspaper headlines, which formed a nice circle coming back to bite the Home Office in the proverbial as the Home Office's PR people are well known for producing tabloid headline friendly stories showing them 'cracking down' on 'illegal immigrants'.

#catgate dates back to a Sunday Telegraph article from 17 October 2009 which had the headline 'Immigrant allowed to stay because of pet cat'. The following day, the Mail, Express, Sun and Star all ran the story, the Express going with the headline 'Got a cat? OK, you can stay'.

The story was then repeated by columnists including Richard Littlejohn, Amanda Platell, Sue Carroll and Eamonn Holmes.

But despite the comprehensive debunking, the Judicial Communications Office issued a statement literally minutes after May's speech, those tabloids are refusing to give up and on Thursday 6 October one leading producer of stories about 'benefits claiming illegal immigrants' The Daily Mail hit back with a front page claim that - yes - this 'illegal' Bolivian was staying for precisely the reason May claimed he was. And, for no particular reason, they 'out' the couple involved as gay.

They quoted at length from the judgment of an Immigration judge to try and prove their point but, of course, they were still getting it wrong and twisting quotes to fit their narrative.

Barrister Adam Wagner comprehensively debunks the Mail on the UK Human Rights Blog.

Wagner writes that "on any reading, the judgment [the Mail cites] does not support the proposition the Home Secretary made in her speech." And he points out the the cited judgment is irrelevant anyway as it was superseded. In that final judgment the Home Office's case was thrown out:
"For entirely separate (to the human rights claim) reasons relating to the UK Border Agency’s failure to follow its own policy, means that the cat issue did not have to be considered and was therefore rendered wholly irrelevant to the final decision not to deport the man."
The Bolivian man could not be deported because it was UK policy to allow someone in a four-year relationship, as he was, to stay. The Home Office had, er, forgotten that policy. The judge did not. The cat came up in a minor role as evidence introduced by a witness for the relationship and the judge made a couple of jokes about it, including one about the cat not having to adapt to Bolivian mice.

The judge said:
"I do not consider that it would be reasonable for the appellant’s partner to move to Bolivia to live with him. There are several considerations that justify this conclusion. The appellant’s counsel addressed these matters in his submissions. The most important perhaps is the condition of the appellant’s partner’s father. The evidence of this appellant’s partner and his siblings is that their father is in a condition that he is not expected to recover from. They stated that a family decision has been taken to give their father collective support as a family and that the support as a family and that the support that the appellant’s partner would give is an integral part of that effort. It would be distressing to the appellant’s partner’s [sic] if he were to have to leave the United Kingdom having regard to his father’s condition."

"I find however that the evidence of the appellant’s friends and of his partner’s siblings is persuasive and telling. In my view it attests to the strong quality of the relationship between the appellant and his partner."
The lawyer involved, Barry O'Leary, also issued a statement pointing out that:
"Their ownership of a cat was just one detail amongst many given to demonstrate the genuine nature of their relationship."
O'Leary also pointed out that:
"It was, in fact, the official acting on behalf of the Home Secretary who, when writing the letter of refusal, stated that the cat could relocate to Bolivia and cope with the quality of life there. This statement was not in response to any argument put forward by this firm or my client (and was, frankly, rather mischievous on behalf of the official)."
The Mail would appear to have none of this though. Facts mean nothing. Ad hominem is their business model.

At the end of their article is an appeal for information on the couple and a phone number. They'll pay some 'friend' of the couple to give them dirt.



Update: The Daily Torygraph has named the Bolivian, and repeated the falsehood about the centrality of the cat to him staying in the UK.
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Monday, 15 August 2011

Action Alert: Help save gay Ugandan Robert Segwanyi!

BBC South Today report



UPDATE, 18 September: A number of websites have reported on developments, including Liberal Conspiracy and LibDem Voice.


UPDATE, 14 September: Robert's case will be in court 4 2 October.


UPDATE, 12 September: Robert was released from detention last week. We now know why. His case was accepted as not being suitable for the fast track and this was 'due to complexity and merits of the case' - a complete turn around in attitude. His asylum application is still refused but has been accepted as a fresh claim with a right of appeal. Robert's lawyers have now lodged an appeal and are awaiting a Notice of Hearing with the appeal date.

This would not be happening if a campaign had not happened for Robert. He would be on a plane to Uganda and we would be organising protection from violence and extortion at the airport and then a safe house. Despite that he could have been picked up police and re-imprisoned. LGBT Asylum News thanks everyone who has helped and pays tribute to the office of Mike Hancock MP and Ugandan refugee John Bosco in particular.


UPDATE, 5 September: Robert has been released from detention. He was not given a reason. He has been told to report weekly to a police station.

UPDATE, 1 September: An appeal has gone in today. For more on the latest from the Home Office see 'How the Home Office is misusing law in gay Ugandan asylum seeker case'.


UPDATE, 26 August: The fresh representations including new evidence, Bishop Senyonjo's statement, MPs statement etc., have been refused by the Home Office.

A legal appeal is being prepared.

Robert's case has been published in the Ugandan media.


UPDATE, 18 August:  7.15pm - We won.

Robert's removal was deferred by the Home Office in a message to his lawyer less than a hour before he was due to be flown to Kampala. An earlier request to a judge for an injunction to stop the removal was refused.

This is a battle victory - but we have not won the war. The Home Office can still refuse to accept the fresh evidence and his asylum claim and issue new removal instructions. However his supporters will fight this and will argue that Robert's mental state and his post-traumatic stress means he should be released from detention, as well as that his claim must be given a proper hearing.

Statement by Mike Hancock MP.

~~~~~

Robert's removal has been confirmed by Home Office.


Fresh legal representations for Robert have been made

New media coverage on Japanese TV, BBC, Huffington Post (front page), pinknews.co.uk, Miami Herald, Advocate and Portsmouth local radio.

Petition over 3,500.

Kenya Airways is refusing to respond to any inquiries regarding Robert.


UPDATE, 17 August: Fresh legal representations for Robert are to be made tomorrow. As of the end of today the petition to the Home Secretary is now over 3,200, to Kenya Airways over 500.

Gay Kenya has tried to get a response from Kenya Airways. They said:

'Sorry, we cannot do that. The flight has already been booked and we are not the ones who did it. You should be asking those in charge of that case.' Dead line.
New media coverage in Sydney Star Observer, Liberal Conspiracy, Eklesia, Xtra, San Diego Gay and Lesbian News and change.org.

Mike Hancock MP has issued a new press release, drawing attention to the evidence of Robert being tortured and to the statement that it is unsafe to return Robert, made by Bishop Senyonjo.

Said Hancock:
"As with all my constituents all I want is proper consideration of their case and the proper laws and regulations applied. It is very clear that they haven’t been properly applied in Mr Segwanyi’s case and I hope that his lawyers can now challenge this and get proper legal consideration. Amazingly and bizarrely the Home Office still say there is no persecution of gay men in Uganda, both now and when Mr Segwanyi was in Uganda when their own country report flatly contradicts this. Looking at the case overall, I have massive concerns about the case and I also believe that Mr Segwanyi’s case “stacks up” and I don’t say either of these things lightly. As the Bishop says, it would now be dangerous to deport Mr Segwani and this is shown by what happened to John Bosco Nyombi."


UPDATE, 16 August: Over 750 have now signed the petition. The flight information is 8pm, 18 August Kenya Airways KQ410. Petition targeting Kenya Airways.

pinknews has published a new story - this is in addition to previous media coverage.

Bishop Christopher Senyonjo has put forward a statement which says:
"The situation of LGBT in Uganda is dire and getting worse. People are being attacked, harassed and we face the revival of the Anti-Homosexuality bill in the Parliament."

"Ordinary people are being forced to move because their fellow Ugandans are attacking them: there is a 'witch-hunt' atmosphere regarding LGBT in the country which is unfortunately being encouraged by many of my fellow Christian leaders."
...
"It is not safe to return anyone who is LGBT or perceived to be LGBT to Uganda."
~~
Robert Segwanyi
Robert Segwanyi is a Ugandan gay asylum seeker who was jailed and tortured yet the UK Border Agency wants to remove him this Thursday, 18 August.

This is despite evidence that Robert is "obviously gay", despite a highly respected psychologist Professor Cornelius Katona saying he is gay and suffering post-traumatic stress disorder from his treatment in Uganda, and despite the backing of Robert's MP, Mike Hancock.

Please help by signing the petition at http://www.change.org/petitions/save-gay-ugandan-robert-segwanyi or by contacting Home Secretary Theresa May personally. And by passing on this message to your friends and contacts.

The UKBA, in writing to Hancock, is standing by an Immigration Judge's decision last year that:
"Even if I am wrong regarding the Appellant's homosexuality I see no reason to depart from the [then] current country guidance" - this guidance being that "the evidence does not establish that in general there is persecution of homosexuality (sic) in Uganda".
This country guidance was changed in April and now reflects the actual situation for gays in Uganda.

Ugandan gay refugee John Bosco met Robert before he was in Haslar detention centre near Portsmouth and has remained in phone contact. He says:
"Robert is in tears and terrified."

"It's a really bad time for him and as a gay Ugandan, I know how hard it is to be gay in Uganda as I was arrested and tortured by police. Many people have been beaten by the public as soon as you have been labelled being gay. When I was deported by the British, you handed me back to government officers and this is what exactly happened to me. I was beaten up really badly. "

"I was lucky that I had friends here in UK who gave me some money which I used to bribe the police, but Robert doesn't have many friends as he has not been here long enough to make friends and most of the time he has been in detention centres."
John says:
"When I met him face to face, it was obvious that Robert is gay. The way he was talking, the mannerism and mentioning some of Ugandan gay guys I from Uganda. Robert told me what he has been through and from my experience I knew it did happen to him as it happened to me when people in Uganda came to know about my sexuality."
Some of Robert's scars
UK Border Agency are refusing to accept John's evidence as new as well as other evidence on the deteriorating conditions for LGBT in Uganda.

He has been refused a fair consideration of his case. His campaigners are supporting him in keeping him safe in the UK. We are urging the Home Secretary to re-examine his case and give him protection in the UK.
You can contact the Home Secretary at:
Rt. Hon Theresa May, MP
Secretary of State for the Home Department,
2 Marsham St
London SW1 4DF
Fax: 020 7035 4745
mayt@parliament.uk
UKBApublicenquiries@UKBA.gsi.gov.uk
Please don't forget to quote Robert's Home Office reference number which is # S1457269

Thank you.

For further information or media enquiries contact:
Paul Canning, Editor, LGBT Asylum News
gayasylumuk@gmail.com

OR

John Bosco
nyjbosco2003@yahoo.co.uk

OR

Mike Hancock CBE MP
email@mikehancock.co.uk
023 92 861055
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Thursday, 16 June 2011

Major campaign launched for LGBT asylum seekers in UK, call for their removal from 'fast track' to removal

Eddy Cosmas (centre) at NUS LGBT conference
By Paul Canning

Two major progressive campaigning groups have jointly launched a campaign on the treatment of LGBT asylum seekers by the UK.

The campaign by the US-based international group allout.org and the British group 38 Degrees calls for the release of Tanzanian gay asylum seeker Edson 'Eddy' Cosmas and the removal of all sexuality based asylum claims from the 'fast track' system.
The group Movement for Justice, of which Eddy is a member, have been campaigning for him for several weeks.

As we have been documenting, Eddy has been told by an immigration judge that there is no risk for gay men in Tanzania.

Eddy told allout.org by phone from the Harmondsworth detention centre:
"Of course I’m in danger there in my country, They know who I am. They’ll arrest me when I get back there."
'Detained fast track' was introduced over a decade ago to deal with rocketing asylum claims and a large backlog of cases. It is all about removing people as quickly as possible because they're supposed to have no real claim - but we already know that the vast majority of sexuality-based claims are being rejected when first examined, meaning that probably most of them end up in 'fast track'.

In their May report 'Fast track to despair', reproduced below, Detention Action said:
"Our research suggests that the Detained Fast Track system is structured to the maximum disadvantage of asylum-seekers at every stage. Conditions and timescales operate to make it impossible for many asylum-seekers to understand or actively engage with the asylum process. Yet this system is entirely unnecessary, as the circumstances it was designed to address no longer exist."'
Fast track' leads to LGBT who may have been tortured and abused being automatically detained, often with fellow countrymen or women who continue that abuse. Yet earlier this year the government rejected a request that because their claims are always complex they, as a group, should be excluded from 'fast track'.

Because of a shortage of lawyers experienced with LGBT cases, charities like UK Lesbian and Gay Immigration Group (UKLGIG) who are stretched and because of the pressure of time in 'fast tracked’ cases, the sort of complex work which needs to be done to present - and win - a case very often simply does not happen.

Eddy Cosmas is 'lucky' because his case has drawn attention. There are many other LGBT asylum seekers whose cases are not known and face being removed - breaking the government's promise - to danger. This has already happened with those from dangerous countries like Uganda, Nigeria and Jamaica.

UKLGIG in their landmark report last year described the Home Office as "cruel and discriminatory." Stonewall's report last year had 21 recommendations for changes to make the system fair for LGBT - only three have been addressed.

Removing LGBT asylum cases from ‘fast track’ would be a real step towards meeting that government promise.

Fast Track to Despair
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Wednesday, 9 February 2011

Stonewall to be picketed over award for Home Office, keynote speaker slot for Theresa May

By Paul Canning

Refugee advocates and LGBT activists are to picket an event organised by Britain's leading lesbian and gay organisation - because it features Home Secretary Theresa May as the star speaker.

The group Stonewall recently awarded May's Home Office first place in its Workplace Equality Index. The Home Office said this was in part "for accepting Stonewall's recommendations in new training for asylum caseworkers on how to deal appropriately and sensitively with the claims of lesbian, gay and bisexual people."

Stonewall say in their report on this year's index:
"Finally, the Home Office and its agencies have taken their wider responsibility to LGB people in the justice system seriously. This year, the UK Border Agency accepted the recommendations of Stonewall's No Going Back research and has begun to deliver new training to caseworkers on how to deal appropriately with the asylum claims of LGB people."
(NB: Stonewall's report 'No Going Back' made 21 recommendations.)

The website Gay Mafia Watch says:
"The Home Office is the lead government department with a number of subsidiaries including the UK Borders Agency which is directly responsible for forcibly removing failed asylum seekers (including LGBT people) fleeing persecution, rape, torture, and death such as Asylum Seeker from Uganda, [BN] – who was at the high court fighting her deportation only last week."

"Not only has this award been given to one of the most despicable elements of the government, Stonewall’s made a special effort to endorse Conservative MP Theresa May as some sort of hero behind this achievement. Neither have anything to be proud about."
They and the group No Borders will picket Stonewall's 2011 Workplace Conference on Friday 18 March outside the Queen Elizabeth II Conference Centre in central London.

London NoBorders says:
"With the Home Office receiving the award for best place to work for LGB people, Stonewall however picked a winner that leaves us with a bitter taste. While those up in office were able to freely express their sexuality, those that had sought the same in the UK were at the mercy of callous bureaucrats working for the very same employer. London NoBorders condemn this decision of Stonewall and would like to remind them of their key priorities and the historical background of their chosen name."

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Friday, 28 January 2011

Brenda Namigadde wins second chance, no thanks to Theresa May

Terengganu Sports Complex at dawnImage by NeeZhom Photomalaya via Flickr
By Paul Canning

In an extremely last minute decision, Barrister Abdulrahman Jafar has managed to pursued an Appeal Court judge to grant an injunction stopping tonight's removal of Ugandan lesbian Brenda Namigadde on Flight VS671 at 9.20pm to Nairobi.

What is clear at this point is that the Home Secretary, Theresa May, had decided not to use her powers to prevent the removal.

All day and evening activists have been hoping for any sign that the government, particularly in the light of the murder of the Ugandan activist David Kato, would reconsider Namigadde's case. In the hours up to her flight, hopes were raised when The Guardian reported that the Shadow Home Secretary Yvette Cooper has put out a statement saying that she had been told that the 'case would be reconsidered'. Her lawyer last Monday filed a new claim for asylum, based in part on the deteriorating conditions for LGBT in Uganda. Did this mean that the new claim had been accepted?

The support for Brenda could not have been greater. At time of writing over 50,000 people have signed a petition from 160 countries. Theresa May's office had apparently been "deluged". Those using London's transport system today would have seen the free newspaper 'Metro' which splashed with Brenda's story on its cover. As the Guardian wrote, MPs have been making representations to May as have Euro MPs. Numerous media outlets have covered her story and shortly the BBC's flagship news shows 'Newsnight' will cover it.

I have been working on this case with the indefatigable  Melanie Nathan of LezGetReal - who secured the admission by 'Kill the gays' bill author David Bahati MP that Brenda must "repent" or be imprisoned if she returns to Uganda - and the great, new international LGBT defence organisation allout.org since last Sunday, when we first became aware of it.

Says Nathan:
"I am so relieved for Brenda - that she is safe. During those many hours of uncertainty, while advocating behind the scenes, I kept thinking of what it must be like to be Brenda in each of those given moments. How it must have felt to not know. How it must have felt when David Kato was murdered, when she thought all was lost; that ride to the airport. I believe notwithstanding the fact that she is safe, she has endured cruelty at the hands of the UK asylum system. What she has gone through has been psychological  torture.I hope this case will change how asylum is handled  for all LGBT people around the world. In the USA and in the UK."
However despite all the signatures, all the media attention, in the end her legal position revolved entirely on the government contesting whether she is in fact lesbian - and if that failed, which it nearly did, her will to physically resist removal.

As I wrote earlier in response to the statement of Matthew Coats, head of immigration at the UK Border Agency, who said: "Ms Namigadde's case has been carefully considered by both the UK Border Agency and the courts on two separate occasions and she has been found not to have a right to remain here.An immigration judge found on the evidence before him that Ms Namigadde was not homosexual."

UK Lesbian and Gay Immigration Group has shown that almost all of a sample of cases examined by them were initially thrown out, so Brenda's case could properly be said to have only been examined once. (There is no evidence to suggest that the rate of rejection has changed since the UKLGIG report was published a year ago. Anecdotal evidence is of an increase in challeges to whether claimants are gay or not.)

The one Tribunal hearing she had was missed by two witnesses who would have spoken to her sexuality - so on the basis of two people missing a hearing the risk would be taken to return her to a country where it is patently unsafe to be a lesbian? And there was other evidence presented by Brenda, including sworn statements.

At that point of rejection the odds were stacked against her. She was on the 'fast track' to removal.

The placing of sexuality-based asylum claims in the 'fast track' system has been heavily criticized. Once disproportionately initially rejected at 'first blush' LGBT are more likely to be placed in 'fast track' where applicants and their lawyers had much less time to prepare an appeal, for, it is argued, often complex claims to be properly considered.

LGBT are far more likely to initially claim on other grounds - because they come from the 'global south' and are closeted (it has been suggested that Brenda's decision to 'come out' late weighed against her). They can come up against homophobic translators or even those judging their claim, as documented in Stonewall's landmark report which includes interviews with Border Agents with little or no understand of the cultures they come from and hence the claimant's own regard of their sexuality. There are numerous reasons why these asylum claims are complex.

By coincidence this week the Conservative MP for Brighton, Kemptown, Simon Kirby, asked the Immigration Minister, Damien Green MP, in the House of Commons about whether he had given consideration "to the participation of (a) women and (b) lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender persons in the detained fast-track procedure."

Green replied:
"Entry to the detained fast-track procedure is determined by reference to published policy available on the UK Border Agency website. The policy lays out categories of claimant who, for reasons of particular vulnerability such as late pregnancy, children or serious disability, are excluded from entry to the process. For all other claimants, the key factor determining entry to the process is whether a quick, fair and sustainable decision can be taken on the case."

"We do not intend to specifically add to an exclusion list all applicants on the basis of claimed or accepted gender, gender identity or sexuality. However, if on a case by case basis, any claimants from these groups are identified as having a claim of particular complexity, the general consideration referred to previously regarding amenability to a quick, fair and sustainable decision will apply."
Translation: we don't accept that these cases are complex. Green is here rejecting the evidence of the Stonewall report.

In another current Ugandan asylum case, still being appealed, gay man Garrick Nyeswa was told in his rejection letter that “there is no evidence to confirm that homosexuals are persecuted in Uganda.”

According to the Home Office's website, the latest 'country information' (known as COI and provided to Border Agents and used to make decisions) is from February 2009.

There has been consistent criticism of the quality of COI. As several reports have found, COI reports on persecution in individual countries is partial, inaccurate and misleading as well as out of date. It often conflicts with the Foreign Office assessment of the risks to UK LGBT citizens visiting the same country as well as information in the Foreign Office Human Rights Report.

During the election, then Conservative leader and now Prime Minister, David Cameron told me:
It's also important that the guidance the Home Office produces for asylum adjudicators to use in judging claims provides up-to-date and accurate information on homophobic persecution in every country.
The fresh claim for Brenda is partly on the basis of the new information of the deteriorating situation for lesbians and gays in Uganda, which appears to have been ignored in the assessment of her claim.

Yvette Cooper said in her comment today to the Guardian:
"The UK Border Agency's operational guidance for Uganda is now nearly two years old and does not mention LGBT rights. It needs to be updated as fast as possible to reflect the current situation on the ground."
The UK has previously decided to stop the return of failed asylums seekers: to Zimbabwe during the height of the violence there.

The government has been asked to recognise by Stonewall, UKLGIG and other NGOs that sexuality-based asylum cases are almost always complex, should be allowed more time and therefore not place them in 'fast-track': they have refused.

The Coalition government agreement says (page 18):
"We will stop the deportation of asylum seekers who have had to leave particular countries because their sexual orientation or gender identification puts them at proven risk of imprisonment, torture or execution."
The experience we have just been through with Brenda Namigadde demonstrates that they have broken this promise.

LGBT Asylum News has three separate and independent pieces of evidence that say that Brenda is a lesbian. We would not have embarked on this campaign if we believed she was not.

If we can demonstrate that in five days why cannot a system supposed to offer santuary to those who need it?
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London vigil for murdered Ugandan activist David Kato; delivery of Brenda Namigadde petition

The UK's new Home Secretary, Theresa May, givi...Theresa May image via Wikipedia

The allout.org petition which sends email messages to Home Secretary  Theresa May to stop the removal of Ugandan lesbian asylum seeker Brenda Namigadde is passed 40,000 at 4pm GMT today and is adding many thousands every hour. Her office has said they are "deluged." As well many hundreds, if not more, supporters have sent individual emails and there is at least one other petition.

The petition was delivered to May at 12.30pm today, when that number stood at 22,000.

A vigil in memory of murdered Ugandan activist David Kato at 11am today (to coincide with David's funeral) at the Ugandan High Commission, demanded that Brenda not be removed.

Photos by James Murray.

Wednesday, 5 January 2011

Bad decisions, detention, ignoring the courts: How the UK Home Office wastes money

Source: Free Movement

I thought I’d start putting together a list of the myriad ways in which the Home Office wastes money (mainly public funds, also private sometimes) in the small world of immigration. It makes my blood boil that legal aid is being brutally slashed in immigration and across the whole area of social entitlements law for the most vulnerable in society while the Home Office fritters away cash like there is no tomorrow. In several of the ways that follow, the extreme ‘institutional indulgence’ to the Home Office shown by the immigration tribunal is a very significant contributing factor.

Additional suggestions through comments are most welcome. My list, in no particular order, is as follows:

1. Rubbish, awful, abysmal decision making. In the official statistics for 2009 it was revealed that 28% of asylum appeals succeeded. 48% of non-asylum appeals succeeded. These statistics tell you something about the appalling quality of decision making. Each appeal requires tribunal time and resources and more implementation resources at the Home Office or FCO than would have been the case if the decision were made correctly in the first place. Some of these decisions have also be legal aid cases in the past, although that looks set to change. This is incredibly, criminally, wasteful of public resources.

2. Indefinite detention of immigrants. The prolonged and in some cases indefinite detention of immigrants is a stain on this society. Sometimes the detainees have committed crimes. Their immigration detention often exceeds their criminal sentence. While The Daily Mail might celebrate this, any right thinking person should be horrified. Deprivation of liberty is the most serious sanction we possess. To use it for months and months on end on people for whom there is little or no prospect of removal demeans all concerned. And costs a small fortune, to boot.

Monday, 3 January 2011

Britain's rules on immigration rights of young spouces legally overturned

MarriageImage by jcoterhals via Flickr
Source: Guardian

By Helen Pidd

The government's immigration policy suffered a blow when two couples made successful appeals against the ban on young spouses entering the UK .

Both couples had married abroad, with one half of each pair returning to the UK alone. They were unable to be reunited in the UK because of the home secretary's ban on non-European under-21s wanting to live with their British partners in this country.

The law was brought in two years ago to deal with the problem of forced marriages. Allowing the appeals, Lord Justice Sedley said: "I have reached the conclusion that the arbitrary and disruptive impact of the rule on the lives of a large number of innocent young people makes it impossible to justify, at least where one spouse is a UK citizen, notwithstanding its proper objective." He said the ban could not lawfully be applied to Diego and Amber Aguilar or Shakira Bibi and Suhyal Mohammed "or others like them".

The judge said it was not for the court of appeal to rewrite the rule. That was for home secretary, Theresa May, to do "in the light of the court's reasoning, unless she decides to abandon it altogether".

The court's decision was welcomed by the Joint Council for the Welfare of Immigrants (JCWI), which brought the appeal on behalf of the Aguilars. Its legal policy director, Hina Majid, said it would "open up the possibility for challenges" from other couples.

A spokeswoman for the Home Office said it would appeal.
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Wednesday, 29 December 2010

Action Alert: Free Denise McNeil

Photo of Denise's 8 year old son
Source: Free Denise McNeil campaign

Denise McNeil has been held in Holloway Prison since she was accused of being a key organiser in the five-week Yarl's Wood Hunger Strike in February 2010. After having lived in the UK for more than ten years, Denise currently faces the continued threat of forced deportation to Jamaica despite the fact that she fears for her life and that this would leave her two children, aged 8 and 17, behind in the UK.

Denise was arrested in September 2008 for possession of cannabis for personal use. She served a six month prison sentence and was taken into detention on the day of her release. It is now over two years since she has been able to care for her sons, who have suffered immense disruption and trauma due to her prolonged detention.

Denise had removal directions for September 2010, but her flight got cancelled on the day of her scheduled deportation. Since then her future is uncertain, and she is still waiting for the outcome of the judicial review of her case.

Denise’s life is in danger should she return to Jamaica. Her brother was killed in March 2010 following his forced removal from the UK. Denise has also lost a sister and cousin to gang violence in the last few years. Denise knows she would be a target if she returned to Jamaica and does not want to put her sons' lives at risk either.

In February, Denise joined a five-week hunger strike by prisoners at Yarl's Wood immigration prison to end to indefinite and abusive imprisonment. She was among the hunger strikers who were locked in a corridor for more than six hours without access to any facilities by guards attempting to force an end to the protests. She was beaten by guards, put in isolation for four weeks and moved to Holloway prison.

Denise was brave enough to speak about this incidence to the media (see below for Denise's comments in the Guardian) on several occasions and believes that this is why she was isolated and moved to prison where there is no access to a mobile phone.

Denise and two other women remain in prison as retribution for taking part in the hunger strike. Ten months on and Denise has still not received adequate medical treatment for the injuries she sustained from guards during the hunger strike.

Denise:
“I’ve suffered enough. It’s been 21 months since I’ve been detained by immigration. I’d just like to be released to be with my children to make up for this time lost and to try and fit back into society which I know is going to be hard. To be a mother like I was before this happened - that’s all I want.”
Read Denise's comments in the Guardian:
Fears for health of Yarl's Wood women in third week of hunger strike
About 20 detainees are protesting over indefinite detention and alleged racial and physical abuseAsylum seekers win new strength to fight after Yarl's Wood hunger strike
'We are determined to win justice for the violent and vicious way we were treated,' says mother in family detention centre protest
Could this woman's fight change the way Britain treats asylum seekers?
Most of the desperate mothers who are held at Yarl's Wood are quickly deported: now four of them are taking the Home Office to court, citing violations of their human rights amid nightmarish conditions. Mark Townsend reports
Immigration bosses to be quizzed after asylum seekers were 'beaten' by guards
MPs to investigate claims that women in Yarl's Wood detention centre were physically abused by officers during hunger strike
Why I am on hunger strike at Yarl's Wood
Denise McNeil, one of the detainees at Yarl's Wood, explains why she has been on hunger strike for the last two weeks
What can you do to help?

Denise took action with other women “for everyone in detention” in the hunger strike. Now we need to support her. Help Denise fight for her release and the right to remain with her sons in safety in the UK. Please refer to her Home Office Reference number which is W1015678/8

1) Stay in touch!

Email freedenisenow@gmail.com to let us know you want to be kept up to date and to get details of demonstrations and further actions.
2) Write to the Jamaican High Commission asking them not to facilitate Denise's deportation
His Excellency Anthony S Johnson
Jamaican High Commission
1-2 Prince Consort Road
London
SW7 2BZ

Fax: 020 7589 5154
Email: jamhigh@jhcuk.com
3) Write to the Home Secretary
Rt. Hon Theresa May, MP
Secretary of State for the Home Office,
2 Marsham St
London SW1 4DF

Fax: 020 7035 4745
emails:
mayt@parliament.uk
UKBApublicenquiries@UKBA.gsi.gov.uk
CITTO@homeoffice.gsi.gov.uk
Privateoffice.external@homeoffice.gsi.gov.uk
4) Show your solidarity by writing to Denise in Holloway Prison:
Denise McNeil, WT4009
HMP Holloway
Parkhurst Road
London
N7 0NU

NEW YEAR'S EVE NOISE DEMONSTRATION OUTSIDE HOLLOWAY PRISON
Friday at 4:00pm
HMP Holloway, Parkhurst Rd, London N7 ONU

See also:

Monday, 6 December 2010

In UK, another gay African asylum seeker threatened with removal

Source: Movement for Justice

Garrick Sebaduka Mugalu, a gay Ugandan asylum seeker who has resided in Britain for the past nine years, is fighting for is right to remain in Britain.

Garrick was subject to police interrogation and beatings in Uganda for his sexuality by the state authorities: “I was interrogated and then beaten with wooden sticks, wire cables, wooden fire and kicked heavily with hard boots”. He was then taken to a cell where the beatings continued with 20 prisoners.

He fled the country and headed for the UK where he was assured by friends that he would no longer live in fear for his life.

The Secretary of State has chosen to not acknowledge the fact that Garrick is gay, despite testimonies from friends, previous boyfriends and pictures supporting this fact. Moreover the Secretary of State believes “there is no evidence to confirm that homosexuals are persecuted in Uganda”.

This is an outright lie; homosexuality in Uganda is illegal; there is no protection for homosexuals; the Anti-homosexuality Bill is the government’s most recent expression of its inherent hostility toward sexual minorities.

Movement for Justice will be demonstrating outside the immigration courts before Garrick’s appeal is heard and sitting in court alongside Garrick.

We encourage all anti-racist, anti-homophobic and anti-torture organisations and individuals to attend the demo and resist this state’s attempt to put Garrick’s life in danger. The details of the court hearing are as follows:
Tuesday 7th December 9am

Immigration Tribunals
Gloucester House
4 Dukes Green Avenue
Faggs Road
Feltham TW14 0LR.
Garrick is a valued member of our community - we won’t let him go!

If you would like more information on this topic or to demonstrate with Movement for Justice contact us at: MFJ, PO Box 27497, London, SW9 7HU mail@movementforjustice.org.uk
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Thursday, 8 July 2010

Political reaction to Supreme Court decision

The Scottish National Party welcomed the Supreme Court decision on LGBT asylum.

SNP MSP for the South of Scotland Aileen Campbell said:
Last October at SNP Conference I seconded a motion which the party membership voted unanimously in favour of to overhaul asylum rules, which at the time did not allow people to seek asylum on the grounds of sexuality.

While it is shameful that any country in the world would persecute someone for being gay, it is also shameful that the UK has refused in the past to protect those same people.
I’m delighted that that has now changed for the better. Hopefully this is just the start of further significant changes which must still be made so that there is a fair and just asylum system that of which we can be proud.
Lib Dem deputy leader Simon Hughes said:.
I am delighted this ruling recognises the rights of gay asylum seekers, ensuring their freedom from persecution around the world.

This plight is one that my Liberal Democrat colleagues and I have campaigned on for years. It is an issue that the Coalition Government is committed to addressing as we seek to restore Britain’s reputation around the world as a leader in the protection of human rights. I believe that today’s ruling will go some way to restoring that reputation.

Other countries around the world must now follow the UK’s lead and recognise freedom of expression and freedom of sexuality for all people.
Conservative Party Home Secretary Theresa May said:
I welcome the ruling of the Supreme Court, which vindicates the position of the coalition government. We have already promised to stop the removal of asylum seekers who have had to leave particular countries because their sexual orientation or gender identification puts them at proven risk of imprisonment, torture or execution.

I do not believe it is acceptable to send people home and expect them to hide their sexuality to avoid persecution. From today, asylum decisions will be considered under the new rules and the judgment gives an immediate legal basis for us to reframe our guidance for assessing claims based on sexuality, taking into account relevant country guidance and the merits of each individual case.

We will of course take any decisions on a case by case basis looking at the situation in the country of origin and the merits of individual cases in line with our commitment.'
TUC General Secretary Brendan Barber said:
The Government has said that it would not return LGBT asylum seekers to countries where they face severe persecution.

Today's ruling gives legal force to this policy, and means that the Home Office must abandon its shameful practice of using the 'keep quiet and you will be safe' argument to return lesbian, gay and bisexual asylum seekers to persecution and death in their native countries.

The TUC has written to the Home Secretary to seek a meeting to press for the policy and practice of the UK Border Agency to be changed immediately.
In an interview with pinknews.co.uk, former Foreign Secretary and leading candidate for the Labour Party leadership David Miliband said he was unaware of that morning's Supreme Court ruling  and had apparently not heard of the Labour-introduced policy that gay asylum seekers can be returned home if it is decided they can be "discreet".
I don't know about the case. I think the whole point is that [things are done] on a case by case basis.
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'Phenomenal' decision on LGBT asylum 'discretion test' by UK Supremes

By Paul Canning

The UK Supreme Court has struck down the so-called 'discretion test' aka 'go home and be discreet' in a unanimous verdict described as "phenomenal" by S.Chelvan who acted at the appeal for one the two gay applicants and had been instructed by those acting for him at the Supreme Court to speak with the media about the case.

He was speaking at the first LGBTI Asylum Conference held in London 7 July and compared its importance to the striking down of sodomy laws in the US Supreme Court saying "today is a great day".

S. Chelvan told the conference that the judgment has historic language, including the first use of 'bisexual' in a senior asylum case, and demonstrated a major advance in judicial understanding of LGBT rights in general as well as LGBT refugee rights. He suggested it had implications legally across the world, including in the EU where several countries use the 'discretion test' and even in the Commonwealth.

Home Secretary Theresa May said:
‘I welcome the ruling of the Supreme Court, which vindicates the position of the coalition government. We have already promised to stop the removal of asylum seekers who have had to leave particular countries because their sexual orientation or gender identification puts them at proven risk of imprisonment, torture or execution.

'I do not believe it is acceptable to send people home and expect them to hide their sexuality to avoid persecution. From today, asylum decisions will be considered under the new rules and the judgment gives an immediate legal basis for us to reframe our guidance for assessing claims based on sexuality, taking into account relevant country guidance and the merits of each individual case.

'We will of course take any decisions on a case by case basis looking at the situation in the country of origin and the merits of individual cases in line with our commitment.'


The homos are coming

Right-wing newspapers reacted furiously with The Daily Express headlining a quote from MigrationWatchUK chairman Sir Andrew Green that: “This could lead to a potentially massive expansion of asylum claims as it could apply to literally millions around the world." The Sun's headline was 'Gay illegals can stay, court rules', the Daily Star 'GAY ASYLUM SEEKERS 'HAVE A RIGHT TO KYLIE' and the Daily Telegraph ran a comment piece headlined 'Can Iranian mullet-wearers be granted asylum?'. The Daily Star editorialises that "opening the floodgates to gay asylum seekers is absolute madness."

The Daily Mail ran its usual two headlines, one of which read 'Supreme Court Judge says homosexual asylum seekers should be allowed to stay because 'gays must be free to enjoy Kylie concerts and cocktails'' Picking up on Andrew Green's meme and the clearly flagged as tongue-in-cheek comments by Judge Rodger, its piece by an anonymous 'online reporter' said "Lord Rodger's extraordinary comments came in a judgment which could allow thousands of homosexuals to claim asylum in Britain."

In a statement London law firm Baker and McKenzie who intervened on behalf of the London office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) pointed out that the Home Secretary's position had been prepared for and approved by Jacqui Smith on behalf of the previous Labour Government. They said:
"The Coalition Government has since announced that it will end returns of asylum-seekers to countries where they would face death, torture or imprisonment as a result of their sexual orientation. This judgment is significant in putting that commitment on a legal footing. The same commitment has also been extended by the Coalition to asylum-seekers who face persecution on the grounds of gender identity, which has not yet been considered by the Supreme Court, but is likely to be governed by the same principles."

Activist group Movement for Justice had protested outside the Court prior to the judgment's announcement, Wednesday. Welcoming the decision, Antonia Bright from the group said:
“This victory advances the whole struggle to enforce the right to equality that is the basis of the Equality Act that Parliament passed in April. It gives us a new weapon in the fight to ensure that the words and spirit of the Act shall be the equal, common right of everyone who lives, works or studies in Britain, whatever the colour of their skin or the colour of their passport, and whatever their race, religion and sexual orientation.

“We will look for cases and conduct campaigns that set examples of using the Supreme Court’s decision and the Equality Act to the full and mobilising to implement them, speaking the plain truth about racism and homophobia.”
Alex Owolade from the group said:
“The immigration authorities must be forced to drop all the cases where they are trying to compel LGBT refugees to return and conceal their identity, and the authorities must end detention. We demand that every single asylum seeker who has been deported in contravention of the Refugee Convention must able to come back to Britain immediately.”
UK Supreme Court LGBT asylum 'discretion test' summary

UK Supreme Court LGBT asylum 'discretion test' Judgment
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