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Asylum Women Speak Out at Galway City Council Meeting

category galway | racism & migration related issues | news report author Wednesday December 15, 2004 19:49author by Global Women's Strike, Galwayauthor email Ireland at allwomencount dot netauthor phone 087 7838688 Report this post to the editors

On Monday night (13th December) two women facing deportation with their
families spoke out at a Galway City Council Meeting presided over by the
mayor of Galway and attended by supporters who packed the public seats.
Together with Women in Media and Entertainment (WIME), they have campaigned
publicly on their own behalf and for others fighting deportation and the
devastating effects of the Citizenship Referendum. They have used the local
and national media as well as street stalls, petitions and letters to
government to advertise their case. WIME worked to get the council to hear
a presentation by the two women...

On Monday night (13th December) two women facing deportation with their
families spoke out at a Galway City Council Meeting presided over by the
mayor of Galway and attended by supporters who packed the public seats.
Together with Women in Media and Entertainment (WIME), they have campaigned
publicly on their own behalf and for others fighting deportation and the
devastating effects of the Citizenship Referendum. They have used the local
and national media as well as street stalls, petitions and letters to
government to advertise their case. WIME worked to get the council to hear
a presentation by the two women, Merriam Dike from South Africa and Landu
Mfumaleka Elonga from Angola, who, together with their children and husbands
have been part of the Galway community for several years. Asylum seekers
and immigrants voted in the elections which gave these councillors their
seats and WIME says that this council and others must now act accountably
towards their electorate. WIME has proposed that this type of action be
taken up with other councils round the country.

Family from their countries of origin came with both women, and both have
given birth to children in Ireland. The women described the different
community work they've undertaken since they arrived here as well as their
skills in managing to keep their families going. They spoke at length about
their friendly relations with neighbours and their daughters' success at
school. Both women are in fear of their own and their families' lives if
they are forced to return not only from persecution and war, but in the case
of Ms Elonga, because everything her family owned has been destroyed, and
they would face life-threatening poverty upon return.

The women were very critical of the Citizenship Referendum, which has left
them and many other families in legal limbo and great distress by removing
their right to residency in Ireland under the Irish Constitution on the
basis of their Irish born children. They asked the councillors what they
would do if faced with such a situation. As Ms Dike said, 'Would you leave
your baby daughter [born in Ireland] behind, so that at least one of us
could be safe, and bring the other two girls back to face possible death?'
Today, the good news is that the government has decided to regularise all of
those families in this situation who were here before the referendum.
However, we would like to know why this may take up to five years according
to news reports and what precisely is meant by the fact that people
in this situation have to be 'willing to commit themselves to becoming
economically viable?' (Irish Times 15th December, p. 9). Is caring for
children not work that makes you economically viable? Will immigrant
mothers be denied the social welfare Irish mothers are entitled to?

We were all shocked at the comments of Sinn Fein councillor, Mr Danny
Callanan. As members of the public entered the council chamber, a
procedural discussion was underway in which Mr Callanan queried the legality
of such presentations and of a possible vote on the matter and appeared to want
to stop the women from speaking out. He also then made the point, repeated
at the end, that these were only two out of many 'sad cases' which one must
be 'sympathetic' towards. Other councillors (Catherine Connelly (mayor), Colette
Connelly, Billy Cameron, all Labour party) spoke in favour of the women speaking
and the rest assented to proceed with the event. Ms Margaretta D'Arcy, Chairperson of
WIME, explained afterwards that it was the council that insisted on a limit
of two speakers; many more women would have come if more speakers had been
possible. The two speakers began from their own experience, which, as we
women know, is the basis for learning the extent of the problems and
beginning to find solutions, and they also spoke of the situation of many
other families.

All councillors had received a letter from Aine Ni Chonaill of the
Immigration Control Platform, an anti-immigrant, racist organisation,
claiming that the women speaking out were 'illegal'. In debate, Mr Callanan
objected to being put in the same category as what he called a 'fascist'
organisation. Yet he was ready to prevent grassroots women facing
deportation from speaking out for their own and their families' lives on the
basis of a procedural point. We believe there are questions Sinn Fein must
answer as a result of his comments - is it party policy to oppose women
asylum seekers who speak out themselves? Is Sinn Fein ready to play party
politics with people's lives if they are immigrants from Africa?

Global Women's Strike, Galway
____________

The Global Women's Strike is a network of non-party political grassroots
women's organisations in over 60 countries which takes joint action on the
8th March and, increasingly, throughout the year to demand the return of
military budgets to our communities, first of all to women, the chief carers
everywhere.
For further information about the Galway council meeting action, call
Margaretta D'Arcy from WIME on 091 565430. For this statement and for more information on the
Global Women's Strike, please call Maggie Ronayne from the Global Women's Strike, Galway on 087
7838688 or email: [email protected]

----

Related Link: http://www.globalwomenstrike.net
author by Tommy Donnellan on behalf of Margaretta D'Arcy - Women in Media and Intertainment (Margaretta)publication date Thu Dec 16, 2004 01:52author address author phone Report this post to the editors

Crossed Emails, if not wires here - Margaretta requested me to post this, not knowing that Maggie, fair play to her, is already there before us :
On Monday December 13th, Galway City Council agreed to hear a presentation by two mothers from Angola and South Africa, with Irish-born children, who had received notices of deportation. They were asking the council to pass a motion calling upon the government not to use the Nationality and Citizenship Bill to break up families.
Our group (Women in Media and Intertainment) accompanied them to City Hall where we witnessed the most abject and despicable piece of politicking I could have imagined.
The councillors had already found in front of them a circular letter from an anti-immigration pressure group, a xenophobic rant against the very idea of the council receiving a pair of what were insultingly described as "illegals".
The public gallery was full, and the two mothers were nervously waiting to be called across to the council table, when a certain newly-elected councillor - no doubt fine-tuning his esoteric, legalistic, jesuitical debating skills for his climb to the Dail - suddenly thought fit to assert that for the council to hear the women mention their deportation notices might in itself be "illegal", and that therefore the presentation should be abandoned. No doubt the councillor will insist that he was solely concerned with procedural exactitude and will deny that he he was playing a racist card under the influence of the malodorous circular letter, but he was certainly most anxious to scare councillors away from the issue. (I was reminded of the trial of Mary Kelly, when the judge ruled that the Iraq War was not to be mentioned.)
Happily, Mayor Connolly refused to play his game of hypothetical illegalities. With the unanimous consent of the other councillors, the presentation did take place, and the two mothers spoke with so much dignity that at the end of their statements there was a spontaneous burst of applause from the council.
And who was the mischief-making councillor?. To my astonishment I recognized a member of Sinn Fein, the party of the enlightened New Politics, who had canvassed the very ward where the women live, declaring his opposition to the Citizenship Referendum. His party abhors "humiliation", and yet, for the sake of a stroke against Labour Party rivals, he was willing to humiliate and invalidate two of his most vulnerable constituents, who (for all he knew) had voted to put him where he was.

Merriam Dike from South Africa and Landu Mfumaleka from Angola with Margaretta D'Arcy, chairperson of Women in Media and Intertainment.
Merriam Dike from South Africa and Landu Mfumaleka from Angola with Margaretta D'Arcy, chairperson of Women in Media and Intertainment.

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author by tribesmanpublication date Thu Dec 16, 2004 19:11author address author phone Report this post to the editors

Glad to hear that someone has got to speak in City hall, I dont know the ins and outs of their applications, the high % of bogus refugees are the ones these ladies need to blame if they are experiencing difficulties in staying as people dont believe refugees any more. I dont see what going to the City council will do cause you could not speak to a less intellegent group of individuals, they spend most their time on local radio taking about the mayors car and driver and who can or cannot keep their mobile phone on in the chamber. Roll on the next council election, these women dont stand a chance if this is the forum they think will help them

author by Ruairi Daltonpublication date Thu Jan 20, 2005 13:41author email R_Dalton486 at msn dot comauthor address author phone Report this post to the editors

I dunno what I can really say to this. I'm not racist by any means, but I believe that I have something against such cases. I mean, this isn't the US here that we are talking about. This is Ireland and more in general europe. Why is it the problem of the irish government to accept all of these people into their country? I personally think that with a mass acception of muslims would drastically change the irish culture, and after many years of change the original culture would be changed. It is hard for me to get my point across about what I really mean without it sounding racist, but this is just how it is and I hope that some ppl can understand what I mean. Also, with all of the other problems that ireland already has within itself. I don't believe that we need a mass influx of immigrants from Africa, eastern europe, and the middle east (the main matter of this is that the cultures in general and religionwise would always clash and we already have had enough of that for years and years). I also don't think that families should be allowed to stay if they are immigrants and have a child. If they are of irish heritage and can aquire the irish passport than that is another story. For example, I read an article about how some muslim mothers were complaining, because their daughters couldnt wear their headdress in several catholic schools and they signed the rules that stated that they couldnt wear these articles of clothing. I mean, If they know that their children are going to a catholic school then why do they complain? They have to adopt the rules and not try to alter them (that is my problem in general with the muslim population also that they have children until they have a son). They try to change everything to suit themselves it seems. If they don't like how the laws are set then maybe they should go somewhere else like England. They can't expect the govt. to throw down everything to suit them. I have muslim friends, but I don't have any problems with them. I have problems with cases such as these and muslims like these people in these very instances, and in the end if they don't like it then they should just get the hell out! If they don't want to go back to their country than they can go somewhere else. They could go to the US, where they would most likely be accepted. The people in Africa need to also work together to solve their own problems instead of always leaving the country. They won't ever have civilized talks tho, cause they still have the tribe mentality within them. I hate to say that, but that is just how it is. To any and all that agree or don't agree with what I have to say write a comment under mine or send me an email telling me how you feel at [email protected]

 
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