NI: New report shows more asylum seekers being imprisoned in Northern Ireland
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Posted: 17 June 2004 Female asylum seeker speaks out about prison officer verbal abuse. An increasing number of asylum seekers to Northern Ireland are being locked up in prison here as part of the Home Office's detention policy, reveals a new report published today (Thursday 17 June 2004). The report - Measuring Misery, detention of asylum seekers in Northern Ireland: a statistical analysis 2002-2004 - has been produced by the Refugee Action Group, a coalition of refugee and human rights campaigners and organisations. The report comes just days before the Prison Service is due to move asylum seekers and other immigration detainees from Maghaberry to prison facilities at Belfast Prison (Crumlin Road) and Hydebank Wood Young Offenders Centre. The report's key findings are:
'Our findings reveal a shocking increase in the use of prison for dealing with people who have often fled to Northern Ireland in fear of their lives. "Over the two years we examined in detail, we see more men, more women and more children being put behind bars even though they have no committed no crime. 'This is a classic case of injustice and it is being carried out by the Home Office and the Northern Ireland Office in our midst. "The imminent removal of asylum seekers from Maghaberry to prison facilities at Crumlin Road and Hyde Bank Wood is not a solution to this problem, but a signal of the Government's current intention to continue with this discredited policy in Northern Ireland. "The publication of this report today signals our resolve to keep speaking out for justice and an end to this policy.' The research is based on the prison visit reports during March 2002 - February 2004 of the Refugee Action Group, which has carried out weekly welfare visits to immigration detainees held in Northern Ireland prisons since 2001. Speaking at the launch in Belfast was Kate (name changed to protect identity), an asylum seeker from Zimbabwe, who fled her home country after she was beaten up and her home petrol bombed as a result of her support for an opposition party. Earlier this year she was put in Maghaberry Prison, where was held alongside convicted prisoners and where she alleges she suffered racist verbal abuse from staff. She said: 'I was treated just like any convicted prisoner. Prison officers jeered at me saying, 'why didn't I just go home to where I came from?' They just didn't understand. I was really distraught while in there. I didn't know how long I was going to be kept locked up. I was crying all the time, night and day.' Copies of Measuring Misery, detention of asylum seekers in Northern Ireland: a statistical analysis 2002-2004 are available on request. Refugee Action Group member organisations: Amnesty International NI
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