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Notes on interview w. Residents Against Racism activist in immediate run-up to the Deportation
international |
racism & migration related issues |
news report
Wednesday July 06, 2005 03:15 by eeeekkkkkk
The Residents Against Racism people knew that the deportation was imminent from early this afternonn. In the early afternoon they were part of an anti-deportation demonstration at the Garda National Immigration Bureau on Burgh Quay. Around 20 Nigerian men were picked up on Sunday night in Blanchardstown. Gardai conducted something of a trawl through pubs in the area as part of the process leading up to the deportation flight. People without ID were picked up in the pubs and their identities checked later. More Nigerians were picked up yesterday evening from a hostel on the quays. Some people got wind of an imminent deportation and did not turn up in recent days to 'sign on' at the GNIB. |
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Jump To Comment: 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1High Court rules refugee decisions 'unfair'
From:ireland.com
Thursday, 7th July, 2005
The High Court has ruled that the constitutional rights of asylum seekers have been breached by the failure of the Refugee Appeals Tribunal (RAT) to grant their lawyers access to its previous decisions.
Mr Justice John McMenamim said the fact the tribunal does not publish its decisions "is unique in the common law jurisdictions".
He believed such a position "cannot accord with the principles of natural and constitutional justice, fairness of procedure or equality of arms having regard to the importance and significance of the issues to the applicants which fall to be determined in this quasi judicial process".
In an important judgment with implications for the future working of the RAT, the judge upheld challenges by eight applicants, including five children, to RAT's refusal to allow them access to previous decisions of the tribunal to assist them when making their claims for refugee status.
The challenges were brought by a Bulgarian national, who said he fled Bulgaria after suffering persecution and harassment as a result of a homosexual relationship he was involved in; a native of Cameroon who claimed she was raped within a forced marriage entered into when she was 15; and a Nigerian widow and her five children.
The action was against the RAT, its chairman, and the Minister for Justice, Equality and Law Reform.
I am not comparing anything to anything. I was pointing up and defending the use of the word 'mass' and it's applicability when 30-40 people are involved in something.
I cannot accept your silly argument eeek, comparing the deportation of 40 + bogus asylum seekers to an atrocity in London is absolutely ridiculous.
What happened here was a routine deportation of bogus asylum seekers, what happened in London was the actions of crazed Al-Qaeda militants.
I aint the one using a terrorist murder to make a bizzare point dear.
Go dance on some other grave.
If you are happy calling the influx a repeeated mass invasion, you might have a point.
If 30 people were killed in say london - it would be called a mass murder - right?
There was no mass deportation, this is pure sensationalism. Removing 40 or so failed asylum seekers once in a blue moon is nothing compared to the 100 + who arrive here every week. Granted, not all are bogus,but the vast majority are proved to be so. Those who are genuine should be given refuge in this state, those who are bogus should be deported as soon as can be arranged.
A decent deportation should be by the jumbo load.
Asylum-seekers held for deportation
Paul Cullen
Garda immigration officers have rounded up dozens of failed asylum-seekers for a mass deportation which was expected to take place last night.
At least 16 people had been detained in Cloverhill Prison yesterday afternoon in readiness for a deportation flight to Nigeria, a spokesman from the Garda press office confirmed.
A number of women were detained in Mountjoy Prison while other Nigerians were picked up in towns and cities around the country and moved to Dublin during the day.
Anti-deportation activists said Garda officers later brought many of those detained to their places of residence to pick up belongings before being transported to Dublin airport.
They said at least four pregnant women were among those detained and that in some cases their pregnancies were too far advanced to be allowed fly.
Leonard Cree, from Drogheda, told The Irish Times his pregnant partner, Christiana Araboro, was detained yesterday when she presented herself at the offices of the Garda National Immigration Bureau (GNIB) in Dublin. Gardaí then brought Ms Araboro to Drogheda to pack before being deported.
Mr Cree said he telephoned a number of people, including her solicitor, and raced up to Drogheda, arriving before the gardaí. While she was packing, gardaí received a call telling them that Ms Araboro was not being deported.
Mr Cree said he was delighted at the turn in events. Ms Araboro, whose baby is due in November, has been told to sign on at the GNIB in September.
Rosanna Flynn of Residents against Racism said immigration authorities had been detaining people over recent weeks. Others were detained yesterday when they signed on.
She said gardaí had picked up a number of Nigerian asylum-seekers in Blanchardstown on Monday. Other reports of arrests came from Galway, Kerry and Cork.
"There are people taken in for deportation who have been here for up to five years. They have integrated well into the communities and now they have been ripped out from those communities to be deported," Ms Flynn said.
"Deporting pregnant women is not a good policy by any standard. To deport women pregnant with Irish children is like theft from their fathers. This Government is denying those fathers a chance to be part of their children's lives in their own countries."
There was an urgent need for the asylum process to be removed from the hands of the Department of Justice into the hands of a body such as the Human Rights Commission, she said.
One of the women reportedly in Mountjoy is Tanya Dube, a South African woman who was the subject of controversy in 2002. On that occasion, she was imprisoned in Mountjoy while heavily pregnant. She was released to give birth, but her child died after two days, according to Residents against Racism.
At least 40 Nigerians deported on special charter flight :: latest
Gardaí have reportedly deported at least 40 Nigerians on a specially chartered flight that departed from Dublin Airport under cover of darkness last night.
Reports this morning said most of those flown to Lagos were arrested in Dublin, Cork, Galway and Athlone over the past few days.
The campaign group Residents Against Racism said it believed at least two pregnant women were among those returned to their home country.
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Thanks to the poster of the above account.
Things have now come to such a pass as to be almost unbelievable. This always presages inactivity on behalf of the public.
It surpasses credulity and understanding that a 21 year old woman, pregnant for four months, who has spent 5 years in Ireland passes happily and trustingly by the only protectors she has who are protesting outside the door, walks into the Garda National Immigration Bureau to sign on and ends up hysterical in the toilet being followed there by five Gárdaí who then take her in a van to collect her belongings, later ship her to the airport. Result: another young pregnant mother out of the country by 1a.m. Wash hands. Pontius Pilate.
Other pregnant women in Mountjoy, mothers and fathers from Dublin to Tralee to Galway detained, people living in fear around the country.
All of this 600 years after the poet Gofraidh Fionn Ó Dálaigh wrote the compassionate poem
"Bean torrach fa tuar bhroide
Do bhí i bpriosúin pheannaide.."
(A pregnant woman - sign of sorrow --
Who was in a prison of suffering...)
Has all compassion completely drained out of the present Irish State?
The brave RaR have carried the candle of compassion on their own for far too long. They need our support desperately.
We need an Ombudsperson to assess every single decision of the present State to send people out of the country.
The State has lost all credibility.
Statoil rules in Mayo. The innocent are in our jails.
The immigrants who approach our shores for asylum or dignity or survival are turned away by an unthinking bureaucratic Minister and Cabinet who cannot foresee (apart altogether from questions of justice and compassion) the benefits that would accrue from welcoming foreign workers and foreign cultures into our, at present, sorry island.