Essential Reading For Anarchists

For obvious reasons the struggles in Greece are very close to many anarchists hearts, so we thought you  might all be interested in “In the struggle between yourself and the world,
back the world”. “In the struggle between yourself and the world, back the world”It was originally presented at the No Borders Camp in Bulgaria last August, and details how an emerging migrant/worker struggle was repressed. The scapegoating tactics by the recession- government & the accompanying rise in murderous Neo-Nazi  activity make it relevant for us all. Its quite lengthy, but perhaps you’ll find time for it over the festering period?

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Dale Farm supporters reject police cautions for obstruction

Today (20 December 2011) and yesterday, over thirty Dale Farm supporters who were arrested during the Dale Farm eviction rejected police cautions for obstruction of a bailiff under the Town and Country Planning Act. [1] They now face a court hearing in the new year

A number of the supporters issued a joint statement:

“We stand by our decision to attempt to prevent the brutal forced eviction that took place. It has left Dale Farm a wasteland, with 83 families homeless and living in inhumane conditions. The cynical use of greenbelt planning laws does not change the fact that this was a racially motivated eviction by Basildon Council. We believe that the eviction was unjust and therefore our actions were justified; we cannot accept ‘guilt’ for standing side by side with the Dale Farm community.” [2]

Mary O’Brian, a member of the Dale Farm community, said “Nobody has ever stood up in history for Travelling people. And Dale Farm comes along, and we had people, really good settled people, that stood up for us. I’ll never forget that, and my people will never forget that. We lost our homes, but it made history.”

Notes to the editor:

[1] Dale Farm was subject to a huge policing operation on 19 October 2011. Several Travellers and their supporters were injured and hospitalised due to police brutality.

[2] The Dale Farm community are now largely living on the private road leading to the evicted site, in crowded and unsanitary conditions. A forced clearance of the road by Basildon Council is feared in the new year. Basildon Council is not offering any culturally appropriate alternative housing, and therefore families will be forced to live in lay-bys and car parks.


Media enquiries: 07040900905, 07583761462
Twitter: @travellersol
http://travellersolidarity.org/
Please email tsn-media@noflag.org.uk to be added to our press list

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Afghanistan mass removal: protest in North Shields this morning

The UK Border Agency are carrying out a mass deportation of Afghan asylum seekers to Kabul on Monday 20th.

Meet at 11.45am Monday at North Shields Metro to join in protesting against this injustice

People like Alex are due to be removed from thr safety of their UK home to danger in Afghanistan.

In response to this there will be a protest at 12 noon outside of the UKBA Reporting Centre in North Shields, Tyne and Wear.

Charter flights are unjust

Charter flights are a numbers driven exercise to remove as many people as possible.

They are conducted under a veil of secrecy which denies deportees access to justice. At least one deportee has been unable to find legal assistance since being detained, only being offered an appointment by the detention centre contracted solicitors for the day after their removal. With the secrecy surrounding charter flights it is impossible to know how many other deportees on this, and other flights have been similarly denied access to justice. The UK asylum determination system is structured towards denying as many applications as possible. Because of this, people who are in need of sanctuary are refused status, made destitute and subjected to violent enforcement procedures. In this context, charter flights such as this one and forced removals in general must be stopped.

Afghanistan is not safe

With regard to Afghanistan, just 2 weeks ago, Human Rights Watch reported: ‘Conflict-related violence remains a daily reality in many parts of the country.

[Human Rights Watch – Afghanistan: A decade of Missed Opportunities 4 Dec 2011 ]

The United Nations also has also raised concerns about conditions for people returned to Afghanistan:

‘The Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) estimates that a significant number of all returnees (potentially 40 per cent) are still in need of reintegration support and that many (potentially 28 per cent) are in dire need of humanitarian assistance.’

[UN, The situation in Afghanistan and its implications for international peace and security, 09/03/2011.]

Yet the UK Border Agency ignore these reports in favour of out of date country evidence which supports their claim that Afghanistan is a safe place.

Stop Deportations

Forced removals such as this are an illustration of the violence and indifference that are essential components of the UK’s dehumanising migration regime. The vast majority of deportations have been to countries devastated by wars and armed conflicts such as Afghanistan, Iraq, DR Congo, Nigeria, Jamaica, Sri Lanka. After being forcibly deported, many have been kidnapped, imprisoned, tortured and killed. Others have had to change their identities or move again to avoid persecution. Forcible deportations tear apart people’s lives as they are split from their families and communities and their right to freedom of movement is denied.

Meet at 11.45am Monday at North Shields Metro to join in protesting against this injustice

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New asylum housing contracts: Serco, G4S, Reliance

New asylum housing contracts: Serco, G4S, Reliance

image - Red Rd flats, Glasgow

The UK Border Agency has announced the ‘preferred bidders’ to provide accommodation for asylum seekers across the UK for the next 5 years.

Public and voluntary sector providers have been completely replaced by the three big multinational companies, all active in the detention and deportation business.

The preferred bidders, by region, are:

London and South: Reliance Secure Task Management Ltd
Wales: Reliance Secure Task Management Ltd

Midlands and East of England: G4S Regional Management (UK&I) Ltd
North East Yorkshire and Humber: G4S Regional Management (UK&I) Ltd

North West: Serco Civil Government
Scotland and Northern Ireland: Serco Civil Government

Reliance Secure Task Management took over the deportation ‘escort’ contract from G4S earlier this year, the announcement coming shortly after Jimmy Mubenga died while being restrained by G4S guards on a British Airways passenger flight to Uganda.

G4S continues to run detention centres in the UK. In June it was revealed that they had received over 700 complaints last year, with more than half related to the Brook House detention centre, near Gatwick airport.

Serco runs the Yarl’s Wood and Colnbrook detention centres in the UK, and seven detention centres in Australia.

In Scotland, the Glasgow City of Sanctuary group has issued a challenge to Serco: can they meet the Scottish Standards for Temporary Accommodation? The code of practice, drawn up by Chartered Institute of Housing Scotland and Shelter Scotland is a good practice tool for temporary accommodation providers. The Sanctuary group hopes to meet with Serco to discuss measures that the company could put in place to avoid some of the awful housing situations experienced by people seeking sanctuary in the UK.

The group said in a press release: “Glasgow can be proud of our history as a city of welcome for people seeking sanctuary. Asylum housing provision, however, has been very hit and miss and some of it, particularly in the private sector, has been downright awful. What we are offering here is a chance for the new landlord to match the goodwill of Glasgow people and the standards of Scottish housing providers.”

“We aren’t asking for special treatment for people seeking sanctuary, just a housing service of the same standard as that for other people who find themselves homeless.”

In Glasgow and across the UK there have been examples of shockingly sub-standard housing being used in Border Agency contracts. Problems have often been highlighted by community groups and voluntary organisations, but this year those groups in Glasgow have had their Council funding cut by almost 50%, leading to redundancies and cut-back services.

Glasgow City of Sanctuary group believes that the Scottish Standards can be used as the basis for a decent housing service, and will help community groups to monitor it. Pinar Aksu is a refugee, Community Development degree student, and a member of City of Sanctuary. Pinar said:

“Poor quality housing is always one of the big issues at the women’s refugee group I work with. If Serco sign up to this, we’ll be able to make that sure everyone knows the standard to expect, we can monitor the service and help people to report problems.”

Glasgow City of Sanctuary group will be meeting to discuss the housing contract on Friday 16 December. Details here.

More Reading:

Read more about the COMPASS housing contracts at the UKBA website, here.

Read some background to the asylum housing contracts, and an article on the cuts this time round, here at IRR website and here at Inside Housing

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Sri Lanka Charter Flight Tomorrow (Thursday)

Sri Lanka Charter Flight Tomorrow
Please pass this information to any Sri Lankan’s in or out of detention
TAG files legal challenge to UK deportation policy
Tamils Against Genocide (TAG-UK), an activist group that assists in obtaining legal redress to war-affected Tamil civilians, filed a legal action in the British High Court Tuesday claiming that UK government’s policy to proceed with the deportation of failed asylum seekers to Sri Lanka was a breach of legitimate expectation of policy review following serious concerns of returnee safety revealed in the UN Committee Against Torture (UNCAT) report and the submissions by independent NGOs including Freedom From Torture (FfT) and Amnesty International to UNCAT, legal sources in London said. The British Government has reportedly organized a chartered flight to return nearly fifty failed asylum seekers to Sri Lanka on 15th December.

The complaint in the case Tamils Against Genocide v. Secretary of State for the Home Department (CO/ 12153/2011) claims that the UK government has an obligation to review its deportations policy in light of credible and relevant recent information, and that the Government has failed to perform the review before issuing deportation order.

The complaint requested the Court to cancel the deportation flight or issue an order to stay the flight until such a review takes place.

The complaint also provided evidence to identify persons originating in the Vanni region as a special category at risk of persecution on return.

* attached Template to apply for injunction against deportation

TAG spokesperson in UK said, “while the challenge lodged today does not prevent the British government from proceeding with the flight, TAG invites lawyers representing deportees to apply for an emergency injunction or stay of their clients’ deportation pending the outcome of TAG’s legal challenge to the deportation policy.

“Lawyers or family acting for deportees due to be sent back on the 15th can use the general template found here which lists the grounds to be used for the application for injunction,” the spokesperson said.

The complaint references Foreign Office Minister Alistair Burt’s statement that his office “will continue to investigate any credible and relevant allegations and review our policy in light of any findings.”

In addition, the complaint cites a recent Swiss Federal Court ruling indicating that UK policy may violate EU case law in relation to asylum claims from Sri Lanka.

The Swiss judgment dated 27 Oct 2011, published a few days ago on the UNHCR website states: ‘political opponents, critical journalists, human rights activists, critical NGO representatives, as well as victims of or witnesses to serious human rights violations and persons who are presumed to have close contacts to the LTTE represented groups are still at risk of persecution in Sri Lanka. In general, returns to Sri Lanka including the East and North are considered reasonable, with the exception of Vanni region where no returns should take place. For persons who left the northern province some time ago, the existence of social network and chances for securing minimal living conditions should be considered.’

TAG has previously successfully intervened in UK as a third party intervenor to prevent deportations in asylum cases relating to persons from Vanni region.

External Links:
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Sentence: 6 Months in Jail Crime: Cleaning Bristol Hospital

A CLEANER who worked at A&E in the Bristol Royal Infirmary was forced by Britain’s absurd border control system into using a fake passport to gain employment there.

Judge Simon Darwall-Smith sentenced him to six months in prison

Kirsty Real, defending, said: “He started receiving threats from gangs,” she said. “He had a daughter and had to keep moving house because of the threats – he was constantly running away. He left his daughter with her mother in Kenya and went to Ireland and then to the UK. He gained employment in this country using false documents but used that money to support himself and to send to his daughter, now 14, to pay for her education.He also sent money to his two sisters, one who is disabled with full left-side paralysis and another who has learning difficulties. He wanted to help them as well as himself.

“He was well-regarded in his job at the hospital. He was working hard and paying taxes and there was never any other problem. He has married in this country under his religion but not in a civil manner and he is instructing other lawyers to try to stay in the country.”

Meanwhile: “The Government will find itself in the position of either having to allow continued immigration in the hundreds of thousands or jeopardising the country’s economic recovery, according to its own fiscal watchdog, the Office for Budget Responsibility.”

Sourced & unashamedly paraphrased from  The Independent & Bristol Evening Post

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Free training for those campaigning for justice in the asylum and immigration system

Bristol Refugee Rights and Bristol No Borders invite you to…

A free training for those campaigning for justice in the asylum and immigration system.

Saturday 10th December, from 1-5pm

A unique chance to find out what is effective, share experiences and improve our local responses.

Trainings from;

 

*Detention Action – improving welfare for those in detention

http://www.detentionaction.org.uk

 

*Corporate Watch – author of Immigration Prisons: Brutal, Unlawful and Profitable

http://www.corporatewatch.org

 

*The Unity Centre – signing support and anti-deportation classes

www.unitycentreglasgow.org

 

*National Coalition of Anti-deportation Campaigns http://www.ncadc.org.uk

 

No need to be an expert, but these workshops will

assume familiarity with the basic issues.

 

  • 1.00pm Community Hall open for tea and coffee
  • 1.30pm Workshops start
  • 5.00pm Workshops Finish
  • Followed by public meeting and party at Refugee Welcome Centre.

 

Where? The Community Hall, St. Nicholas of Tolentino Church, Lawfords Gate, Easton, Bristol, BS5 0RE

 

Please contact BRILL_2@mail.com or call 0117 908 0844 to reserve a place & to tell us what you’re interested in. THANKS

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Aggro at Morton Hall Immigration Prison

We the detainees were subject to Lock down on 30/11/2011 earlier then usual time as some detainee peacefully protested by the astro (Football ) where detainee protested as earlier on 30/11/2011 detainee Vassell were allegedly attacked by gang of officer and taken to RFA.

remember now -it's not a prison


During the protest about 30 detainee stayed out for 30 minutes then the detainees came to individual room.

Early in the morning of 01/12/2011 we were given first of the notice to detainee  to our shock it stated an attempted escape were discovered and  2 member of staff were assaulted.

Then through out the day detainees were taken to different HMP (Namly Lincoln and Nottingham and other HMP)

Only 2 detainees were sent to different detention centre one to Dover and one to Colnbrook.

Such was Unlawful lock up against detention service order authorised by the parliament.
***** on behalf of detained detainees
************************************************************
Below was served on detainees
Ministry of Justice – UKBAstards – Morton Hall IRC
Notice to Detainees – Thursday 1st December
On 30th November, an attempted escape was discovered at the Centre. This followed a day in which two members of staff were assaulted and a number of detainees joined in a prolonged dispute regarding various issues, which delayed the end of association in the evening.

These events have raised serious concerns about the safety and security of those who live and work at the Centre.

As a result, I have no option but to carry out a full lock down search. Unfortunately this means that you will be confined to your rooms until this is completed. As always, you will be provided with meals and visits will continue to take place. We will also attempt to deal with any exceptional problems detainees are facing. It is expected that this will take the whole day and that you are unlikely to be unlocked until Friday morning. However, this may take. longer if necessary.

The safety and security of everyone at the Centre always has to be the first priority. It Is important that we discuss issues openly and encourage mutual respect. I have therefore asked that a series of community meetings are scheduled for Friday in order that everyone can have a chance to discuss how we can work together more successfully in the future and avoid the need for measures such as this.
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3 Days in Calais

NEWS AND REPORTS FROM ACTIVISTS ON THE GROUND:

Wednesday 16th November

The new squat opened for the migrants who were evicted from Africa House was evicted on Tuesday –  illegally this time. The police forced their way in, arresting 7 migrants and 2 CMS activists. One activist charged with occupation. All were released after spending the night in the police station and some have bruises from being ill-treated while in custody.

A van from the charity La Belle Etoile collected the blankets from the squat and everybody is out in the streets again.

Thursday 17th November 2011: TWO MIGRANTS KILLED IN A ROAD ACCIDENT NEAR DUNKERQUE

Two Egyptians were killed during Wednesday night-Thursday morning on the A16 near Dunkerque in a collision between an HGV and a car which was occupied with other migrants.
Seven people were found in the car, including five Egyptians without papers and two other people, “surely people smugglers”, according to the prosecution of Dunkerque. According to initial enquiries, the car of migrants had swerved when it was overtaking the Dutch HGV, and was then hit from behind. The three migrants who survived the accident, which occurred around 1am, were rescued from the side of the road. They have still not been spoken to by the investigators as they are awaiting a translator. The two presumed people smugglers, who were sitting in the front seats, fled the scene. The breath tests on the German driver of the HGV did not reveal anything abnormal.

Friday 18th November

After the eviction of Africa House and the new squat many people are still sleeping under the stars, although some have found accommodation in other squats. Most squats have no fire and even in the jungles people don’t make fires because they say the police come if they see it.

The police still come and destroy the camps regardless, and while people usually just rebuild them, they remain minimal structures. The charities are complaining that there are lots of asylum seekers sleeping out, with nothing but a couple of blankets. It is already very cold and wet, and the cold weather shelter remains closed as it only opens when the temperatures drop below -4C. It’s also the first time that there’s no Africa House.

Come to Calais!

Every person watching and intervening makes a huge difference in the levels of police brutality against migrants and you don’t need to do anything more than you feel comfortable with.

Winter is the hardest time in Calais.  We need to maintain a constant activist presence on the ground and need people all the time.  If you’re thinking of coming, please email us and we can give you some up to date information, or put you in touch with part of the network near you.

We also need resources for the winter: tents, sleeping bags, SHOES  and warm clothes ,especially men’s  jackets.  Please be aware we have limited space and need to prioritise these items above others. CANNED FOOD ALSO MUCH NEEDED AND RAW FOOD THAT IS NOT PERISHABLE & NOT EXPIRED. THANKS!

http://calaismigrantsolidarity.wordpress.com/

 

 

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Bristol No Borders Presents : “Illegal” (2010) This Thursday!

Bristol No Borders as part of its popular Cafe/Cinema Night Presents: “Illegal” by  Olivier Masset-Depasse

Film Start:7.45pm

Kebele, 14 Robertson Road, Bristol. BS5 0JY

Tania, a young Russian woman who lives illegally in Belgium with her 13-year-old son Ivan. Constantly on her guard, she dreads police checks until the day she is arrested. Mother and son are separated and Tania is placed in a detention center. She will do anything to be reunited with her son but won’t manage to avoid threats of deportation. Written by Hannelore Goossens

“A taut and powerful movie that might have easily been titled “Nobody is Illegal” given its courageous stance against the kind of xenophobia generated by a capitalist system in decline.”

Vegan Hotdogs, Popcorn & Mulled Cider/Apple Juice available from 7pm

Discussion after film, with contributions from Bristol Hospitality Network & Bristol Refugee Rights.

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