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Dallas Court Reporting Centre, a 'point of disappearance' for asylum seekers.

Heather | 13.03.2005 14:48 | Migration | Repression

This is a report of the demonstration at Dallas Court Reporting Centre, South Langworthy Rd, Salford on Tuesday 8th March, 2005.

Following the screening of the BBC programme ‘Asylum Undercover’ which exposed the abuse of immigration detainees and resulted in the suspension of 15 employees of Global Solutions Ltd (GSL) around 50 demonstrators including asylum seekers from many different countries, gathered at Dallas Court Reporting Centre in Salford to demand justice for asylum seekers and an end to arbitrary detention and deportation.

The Home Offices answer to the abuse seen on the BBC programme is to call yet another public inquiry concerning GSL (Group 4) which has taken over the contract from Wackenhut according to the BBC. This is the third enquiry into this company. The last inquiry into allegations of abuse at Yarls Wood concluded that most of the incidents exposed by an undercover journalist did happen, and yet GSL retained all its contracts to run Removal Centres plus a huge contract of undisclosed value to build and manage an accommodation centre for asylum seekers was awarded to them only thirty days after the publication of the results of the inquiry.

Dallas Court is effectively a ‘point of disappearance’ for some, into detention and eventual deportation to potentially unsafe countries. The Home Office insists that asylum seekers who barely have enough money to buy food, let only transport, have to report at centres like Dallas Court up to five times a week. Those without transport money can end up walking up to 25 miles to reach the centre from the Greater Manchester boundary. Each time an asylum seeker reports to Dallas Court, they fear being snatched, detained and deported.

The purpose of the demonstration was to show support for asylum seekers arriving to report at Dallas Court, to highlight the fact that there are campaigning groups who can assist asylum seekers in finding legal representation and to offer asylum seekers an opportunity to speak out against the unjust and inhumane treatment they suffer, bringing the hidden stories of people out into the open. Despite the sadness and anger that came out when people seeking asylum spoke on the open mike, there was also
a real feeling of celebrating solidarity with people coming in to sign and
with other people demonstrating. A group of Zimbabwean drummers came and they
were the focal point of the demonstration with people dancing and singing. Asylum seekers reporting at Dallas Court that day, came out of the centre and joined the demonstration. Representatives from The Times newspaper, the Guardian and the Area News were there and the demonstration was also covered later that afternoon by BBC Asian Network on radio.

Plans are to do it again on a regular basis. Possibly to target a day when someone with a high risk of arrest goes to report. We also have tentative plans for a mass picnic there when the weather improves and welcome any creative ideas from people who want to be involved. Most importantly, we have to continue being a thorn in the side of Dallas Court to constantly keep the spotlight on the inhumane procedure and practice of detention. The UK currently indefinitely holds more than 1,500 men, women and children in detention and the government would prefer the general public not to know what happens inside detention centres and during deportations. Assaults, disturbances and suicide are a frequent feature in the detention and removal process. Not the most palatable of truths for a government whose Home Office states they are building a just and tolerant society.

The demonstration was supported by No Borders network, NCADC the Iraqi Solidarity Campaign and the Committee to Defend Asylum Seekers.

For further information email  simple_things@riseup.net

No Borders network www.noborder.org
National Coalition of Anti-Deportation Campaigns (NCADC) www.ncadc.org.uk
Committee to Defend Asylum Seekers www.defend-asylum.org
Iraqi Solidarity Campaign
www.iraqsolidaritycampaign.blogspot.com

Heather
- e-mail: simple_things@riseup.net

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Comments

Hide the following 8 comments

Be careful who you believe

13.03.2005 16:02

I'm not sure you should be quoting the BBC in support of your cause. The BBC is financed by a poll tax, and many poor people in this country are fined and imprisoned for failing to pay for it whether they want its services or not. The state forces people to pay for the BBC and then tells us the BBC is impartial. Do they take us for morons? Don't answer that!

don


bbc

13.03.2005 20:07

no intention of quoting the bbc in support of our case and i have no illusions about the bbc whatsoever. however, because the demo was related to the recent tv programme which did go out on prime time tv showing the abuses in detention centres (where the bbc had got an undercover reporter in to show what was happening) i don't think its right to dismiss the use of the mainstream media. i'm more bothered about what is happening to asylum seekers than living in some activist ghetto which refuses to use mainstram media. like i said, i have no illusions about mainstram media but i am happy to use them when it suits.

heather


Good point from a publicity point of view

13.03.2005 22:08

but the BBC is different. There are many sources of information in this country from the Daily Telegraph to the Morning Star, and that's just newspapers. The BBC is not mainstream. It is a state funded news and entertainment organisation which people are virtually forced to pay for or else they can be fined or imprisoned. I wonder why. On this site, people don't like big business. The BBC is one of the biggest businesses in this country, and the only one with an income backed by the police and court system. Don't quote the BBC, it does your cause no good at all in my opinion.

don


bbc2

13.03.2005 23:09

um yeah don, but firstly the relationship between the bbc and the state has got nothing to do with what asylum seekers and the rest of us are doing getting stuff like the demo at dallas court together. the bbc are a tool, so use them and (as always with the medis, its wise to be cautious, be careful what you say and be aware of how it might be used) but not to use them is stupid. if a thousand people watch a programme that shows the physical, sexual and racist abuse of asylum seekers on primetime tv then maybe it does have some small chance of opening up the debate and exciting further media interest, which actually it has had and is more than we could have done on our own.

as for "on this site, people don't like the bbc". well yeah. i don't either. except when i'm bored and want to watch tv. seriously though, i think many people on this site appreciate that you sometimes have to use the media that goes into peoples homes everynight as well as indymedia. this site is an open posting site so there isn't really any concensus against the bbc (just pointing that out, to be pedantic).

finally, i wish you'd stop saying it does "my" cause no good. why and with whom? are people so crap they can't see what is important if faced with the fact that i am talking about asylum seekers being seized arbitarilly and physically, sexually and racially abused in detention. to me what the state does to asylum seekers and what we can do to prevent it is way more important than whether people are happy to use the bbc as a tool or not.

its not my case, its their case and if your choice was their choice you'd use every media tool going to keep you here.

thats all.

sigh


Dance with the devil

13.03.2005 23:37

The BBC are not a tool for you to use. They are an arm of the tool you are fighting.

don


why not open a separate article about the bbc?

14.03.2005 07:13

Don

You have a lot to say about the bbc - it would be better having it under a thread of it's own with a title mentioning the bbc so that people looking for information on that subject can find it easily.

Heather,

Good luck with future demonstrations and making contact with isolated people. I agree with the point about 'activist ghettos' < the reality at present is that BBC channels are free-to-air broadcasts while Undercurrents etc are tapes that most people in Britain have never heard of.

bobby


complex issue

14.03.2005 12:11

I think it can be misleading to take a crude ideological stance against the BBC. Yes, it receives mandatory funding rather than private subscriptions. So does that mean we'd prefer to abolish it and only have private broadcasters like in the US? Airwaves dominated by corporate pro-war networks like Fox? Careful what you wish for...

BBC funding through the licence fee is, sure, unfair insofar as it's non-income-related, but it's really not a vast sum compared to other bills we all have to pay.

It's also an illogical fudge. But it's an illogical fudge that, to my mind, is preferable to either straight state-funding (which tends to produce docile pro-govt news like in eg. Russia, Ukraine) or a pure privatised market system (which in practice also tends to produce docile pro-establishment 'safe' news like in the US).

Point is the BBC is a weird sort-of-state but sort-of-independent entity. A crude anarchist analysis may lead us to attack it as an arm of the state. But is it really worse than private corporate big business TV networks?

Final question for anyone unsure: do you think a Murdoch-owned network would have run this documentary at all?

type


be a hermit

27.03.2005 20:17

don - if you don't like big business or using big business and think that campaigners shouldn't use should tools, then why are you using the Internet? your email and web traffic will go through many routers made by big businesses such as Cisco, be powered by nuclear power to some extent (depending on where the routers are) and so on. in fact, why are you using the Internet at all to preach if it's mainly only white middle class people that have access to it?

me? I was an idealist once, but reality crapped (sic) in and now i can't be bothered being "holier than thou" since it is just a distraction. i reckon we all have our own lines...

michael


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