Immigration
detention: resistance and rebellion
Karen Doyle
RED PEPPER, March 2015
With protests and
hunger strikes now taking place inside eight of the UK's Detention
Centres, is this the beginning of the end for detention?
The racism and sexism at the heart of the UK’s secret network of
immigration detention centres was thoroughly exposed by Channel 4 News
on the 2nd March 2015. That same week the system was further undermined
by the report of the parliamentary detention inquiry that recommended
radical changes to who is detained and for how long.
Strengthened by the public recognition of what detainees and
ex-detainees have been speaking out about for so long, detainees
responded by launching an on-going campaign of resistance and rebellion,
determined to see an end to the hated system of Fast Track, the release
of all vulnerable detainees and a 28 day time limit as proposed by the
detention inquiry. This is just a small snapshot of what has been
happening in the detention centres:
Yarl’s Wood: Mass demonstrations continued for two days after the
Channel 4 News exposure, the women gathered in the gardens refusing to
return to their room, chants of “We are not Animals” rang through the
corridors. Women continue to write that statement on their T-Shirts and
collective organising to get help to sick women and resist flights
continues.
Harmondsworth: There have been mass demonstrations with the men
demonstrating in the courtyards, refusing to be locked up – these are
taking place regularly. Every day there is resistance through refusing
to follow rules and resisting flights. In response to the recent Afghan
charter flight, the Afghani detainees gathered together in the courtyard
with other detainees, refusing to be separated and refusing to be moved
so that they could not be taken on to the flight. Many detainees have
started a hunger strike, saying they will continue until Fast Track is
ended.
Colnbrook: Demonstrations have taken place demanding that the chair of
the detention inquiry is invited into Colnbrook to meet with detainees.
Some detainees have staged protests refusing to go into their rooms and
spreading disinfectant through the corridors. Many are on hunger strike.
The Verne: In a desperate act of anger and despair a detainee climbed
onto the roof shouting ‘we need our freedom, we need our families, this
is not right, we are not animals’ he gathered over 150 men around him
before he put a makeshift noose around his neck and threw himself off
the roof. 10 guards jumped on him; detainees say they saw the guards
pressing down on the man’s injured legs. The detainees responded in
fury, trying to take back the man from the clutches of the guards. The
guards had to retreat to a locked room as the detainees shouted for
freedom, smashed windows and expressed their fury. The detainee who had
tried to kill himself was not given any medical treatment, he was locked
up in two different police stations, threatened with being charged and
moved to Colnbrook where he has joined the on-going protests there.
These are just a few examples of the kind of resistance and rebellion
that is rocking the detention system. There have been reports of
demonstrations and hunger strikes in Morton Hall, Dungavel, Tinsley
House and Brook House. Supporters outside have held noise demonstrations
outside and blocked charter flight buses by super gluing their hands to
the windows, Everyday detainees have been speaking out through the
Detained Voices website. On the 11th April there will be a mass,
national solidarity demonstration at Harmondsworth organised by the
campaign group Movement for Justice.
Resistance is growing, the detention estate is proving unstable and
explosive, and already a significant victory has been won with the Home
Office withdrawing their plans to double the size of Campsfield.
Detainees, Ex-Detainees and other campaigners sense a change in the air
and are determined not to waste this opportunity to end immigration
detention once and for all.
Karen Doyle is an activist with Movement for Justice by Any Means
Possible
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