Dignity Not Detention - the 3 Day March
Dignity Not Detention | 10.10.2007 16:55 | Migration | Repression | Social Struggles | Sheffield
You are welcome to join us and we hope you publicise our march.
See the leaflet for more details. Contact us at dignitynotdetention@yahoo.co.uk
Dignity Not Detention
e-mail:
dignitynotdetention@yahoo.co.uk
Additions
PDF version of the leaflet
11.10.2007 22:00
Dignity Not Detention - the 3 Day March - application/pdf 419K
Dignity Not Detention - the 3 Day March
Friday 26th 12 noon: Demonstrate @ Milton House, Home Office (Charter Row, Sheffield S1 3FZ).
Rally: 1.45pm @ Ellesmere Green, Burngreave, Sheffield
Saturday 27th Leaving Eastwood Methodist Church, Rotherham @ 9am
Rally & social in Doncaster town centre from 6.30pm
Sunday 28th Leaving Priory Church, Doncaster DN1 1TR @ 9am
3pm: Demonstrate @ Lindholme Detention Centre (A614, Donc. DN7 6EE)
Right to Work
Did you know that people seeking asylum in this country are not allowed to work? Rather than face destitution or criminalisation they are forced to work in unregulated jobs, often with the lowest pay and most dangerous conditions in industries which already use casual labour to drive down wages and conditions for us all. Therefore we demand their right to work.
Politicians and vicious media campaigns spread myths about ‘scroungers’ and encourage people to believe that refugees rather than the politicians themselves are responsible for housing shortages and unemployment. Yet asylum seekers get no special priority for council housing and are given benefits below the minimum allowed for British nationals.
Asylum is Not a Crime
Over 40,000 asylum seekers pass through the UK’s 10 prison-like detention centres each year. Unlike prisoners, they have no release date, few legal rights and have often committed no criminal offence.
Government restrictions on legal aid make it almost impossible for asylum seekers to appeal against their detention without trial. While civil war and human rights abuses are condemned by the UK Government in Zimbabwe, Iraq, Afghanistan, Iran, Sudan and elsewhere, exiles from these countries find themselves detained without legal support, facing deportation and death.
Why Lindholme?
Staff at this former prison treat detainees as offenders, rather than recognising that they have not been convicted of any crime. Run by the Prison Service, Lindholme “Immigration Removal Centre” near Doncaster holds up to 112 male detainees. An unannounced inspection by HM Chief Inspector of Prisons in 2004 recommended that the Government “should review whether Lindholme is an appropriate facility for an immigration removal centre” due to it being “deficient in all four of our keys tests: safety, respect, purposeful activity and preparation for release”. Inspectors noticed Prison Officers shouting in English to non-English speaking detainees and a lack of interpreters.
People in Lindholme have left their homes and families to escape war, torture and dictatorship in their own countries. Yet the UK Government invades Iraq and Afghanistan; it helps western companies plunder £millions of resources daily from places like Congo in Africa while proxy wars rage; it works with corrupt regimes around the world and then it tries to imprison and deport people who seek safety in this country.
Does the Government speak for you when it acts like this?
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