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No
welcome mat for asylum seekers
IRIN News
January 16, 2008
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=76230
The British government's
loud condemnation of human rights abuses in Zimbabwe led many Zimbabweans
to assume they could find easy refuge in the United Kingdom: the
reality for asylum seekers has been far less straightforward.
According to Home Office
figures, around 20,000 Zimbabweans sought asylum in Britain between
2000 and 2007; of those, 4,807 applications were successful - 944
of that total making it on appeal.
In 2000 - a year of state-sponsored
election violence and land seizures in Zimbabwe - 95 percent of
1,010 asylum applications were refused. In 2002, after European
governments condemned the conduct of presidential elections held
in March, 62 percent of 7,655 applications were rejected.
The number of asylum
applications by Zimbabweans fell sharply from 2002, but in 2006
began to rise, reaching 1,650 requests; the trend continued in 2007,
according to the Home Office. Successful applications, in terms
of initial asylum decisions made before appeals are heard, were
stuck at just 8 percent between 2004 and 2006, but rose to 19 percent
in the last quarter of 2007.
A Home Office spokesperson,
speaking to IRIN on condition of anonymity, denied that the immigration
department was setting the bar unfairly high for Zimbabweans. "We
know that the human rights situation is bad in Zimbabwe, but not
everyone is at risk," she said. "Every case is treated
on its own merits and those who need protection will get it; the
remainder would be encouraged to go back voluntarily, failing which
they will be removed forcibly."
No safety
guarantees
The Refugee Council,
the largest organisation in the UK working with asylum seekers,
insists that deporting failed Zimbabwean applicants heightens their
risk of persecution when they get home. "At the moment it's
not safe to return anybody to Zimbabwe, as their safety cannot be
guaranteed," said council spokesperson Hannah Ward. She alleged
there were "anecdotal stories" of people ill-treated once
back on home soil.
For the past two years,
forced removals of Zimbabwean asylum seekers has been suspended
due to a court case, but late last year the government won an appeal
against that decision, "and we are now in a legal limbo",
said Ward.
"We've called it
hypocritical that in countless statements the government has condemned
the Zimbabwean regime, but in the last two years the government
has been pursuing a really expensive court case fighting to be able
to remove Zimbabwean asylum seekers back to Zimbabwe," she
argued.
Those caught up by the
current legal dispute are denied the right to work or claim benefits.
According the Refugee Council, between October 2006 and September
2007, 210 Zimbabweans opted to join a voluntary return programme,
qualifying them for a free bed and three meals a day. "We're
worried people agreed to go home to get that support," said
Ward.
Aside from Zimbabweans
seeking refugee status, there are many more believed to be living
and working in the country illegally. Chipo (not her real name)
spent six months in prison for using false papers to work as a child
carer. After completing her sentence she has spent a further seven
months in Yarl's Wood, a detention centre for immigration offenders
and failed asylum seekers. "They lock the door behind you wherever
you go," she complained. "The food is terrible and you
cannot afford to buy any alternative with the 75 pence (US$1.50)
they pay you per day." Chipo is awaiting an immigration appeal
hearing.
Gill Butler of the Yarl's
Wood Befrienders, a group that visits and supports the 400 people
held in the facility, is blunt in her criticism of the detention
centre. "This should not be happening in a country that claims
to be civilized, human beings should not be treated like this,"
she told IRIN.
The criteria for asylum
status is already extremely strict, but with media coverage in Britain
demonising refugees, "I think there is a concerted policy effort
to look for reasons to deny people asylum and to find ways to remove
them from the country," said Ward. "From our point of
view, it's not just Zimbabweans but asylum seekers in general."
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