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Cyprus: Kurdish refugees fight for asylum
international |
rights, freedoms and repression |
news report
Tuesday October 31, 2006 18:24 by Cillian Gillespie - Socialist Party/Socialist Youth cillian at socialistparty dot net
Urgent solidarity needed Cypriot government intends to hand over Kurds who won struggle for refugee rights, into the hands of their Syrian torturers. The Cypriot government is notorious for maltreating refugees. Police violence, illegal arrests, illegal detention and deportation are common practice. Last May a group of asylum seekers led the biggest refugee protest that Cyprus had ever seen against these practices. The protest involved occupying Nicosia’s central square “Eleftheria Square” for 11 days and nights and the Red Cross headquarters for 5 more days and nights. Demonstrations took place that involved up to a thousand people. The Kurds, who participated until the end of the protest, successfully gained their legal rights as asylum seekers through this struggle: they were given medical cards and valid residence permits, temporary housing for all in need, an emergency lump sum of money and work permits complying with existing collective agreements. |
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Jump To Comment: 1Model protest letter:
To:
Dimitris Christofias,
President of Parliament, gen. secretary of AKEL
[email protected]
N. Silikiotis,
Minister of Interior,
[email protected]
Office of the Ombudsman
[email protected]
Government spokesman,
[email protected]
Dear Sir/Madam,
We would like to bring to your attention and protest at the inhuman conditions facing Kurdish refugees in Cyprus who amongst others were involved in a protest campaign last May 2006 to force the government to implement their legal welfare and benefit rights. The campaign involved an occupation of Eleftheria square and the Red Cross buildings.
Since then about 100 Kurdish refugees, the huge majority of them from Syria, applied for asylum but have had their appeals rejected. The asylum application procedure was severely flawed with no account taken by government officials of the oppression of Kurds in Syria (but also Iran, Iraq and Turkey). Most of the interviews lasted a little more than an hour, including translation, and the applicants complain that they were repeatedly interrupted and not allowed to finish what they wanted to say. Whenever they tried to speak about the oppression they face as a nationality they were told this was irrelevant to their application.
Most of the applications for asylum were rejected. Nobody was granted political asylum! Not even asylum for humanitarian purposes was granted to anybody. No tolerance was shown either. Everything shows that the authorities particularly the police authorities, moved in a vindictive way, and many Kurdish refugees face the prospect of deportation.
The authorities seem to disregard the fact that if the refugees are deported back to Syria they will face certain imprisonment and torture at the hands of the Syrian regime - most of them will probably “disappear”! We want to stress to you that after the May mobilisations of the Kurds in Cyprus, the families of those who participated were visited by the Syrian secret police to be informed that the authorities know about the activities of their family members in Cyprus. They were threatened that they would pay for it.
We understand that the Cypriot people suffered a lot in the past, due to the coup de etat organised by the far right and the Greek military regime, and through the Turkish invasion of the island that caused 200,000 refugees (1/3 of the population). The representatives of the Cypriot people would be expected therefore to show sensitivity when other people face similar conditions.
We would like to express our complete opposition to the Cypriot government’s present treatment of the Kurdish refugees. You should understand that we will fight for the rights of the Kurdish refugees and the Kurdish people in the same way that you would expect us to fight for the rights of the Cypriot people and refugees. If there is no change in policy by the Cypriot government, therefore, you should know that we will spread publicity about this issue as widely as possible internationally and explain the role of your government in taking part in the oppression of Kurdish refugees.
We demand asylum and a policy of tolerance and hospitality to the Kurdish refugees.
Yours,
Trade union resolution:
Stop deportation of Kurdish refugees in Cyprus:
build solidarity campaign.
(you can fill in the name of your union in the places where is written “this union branch”)
This Union Branch:
1) notes that the Cypriot government intends to deport a group of Kurdish refugees to Syria, where their lives are under threat as they are being persecuted by this regime. This group of asylum seekers was earlier involved in protests last May, occupying Nicosia’s central square “Eleftheria Square” and the Red Cross headquarters. This action was taken to protest against police violence, illegal arrests, illegal detention and deportation as well as to gain the basic rights of asylum seekers that the Cypriot government illegally denied them.
2) strongly condemns the Cypriot government which instead of changing its anti-asylum seekers attitude seems to want to proceed to deport these people, ignoring the conditions they will face when returned to Syria.
Union Branch demands from the Cypriot government:
We call for asylum for the Kurdish refugees and a policy of tolerance and hospitality to the Kurdish refugees.
For the following reasons:
1 If they are granted asylum they can live free in Cyprus or the EU, having equal rights and obligations with the local population.
2 Local employers won’t be able to use them as means of attacking the Cypriot worker’s wages and rights
3 They will be able to continue the fight for their national rights, for freedom to the Kurdish people and for the right of their own homeland.
Therefore Union Branch agrees to:
Support wider trade union and solidarity campaign initiatives to highlight the case of the Kurdish refugees in Cyprus and the cruel, hypocritical and scandalous policy of the Cypriot government within the Irish labour movement including the lobby of the Cypriot embassy on November10th.