AYS Daily Digest 14/06/21: Trial against ‘Moria Six’ not up to legal standards
Watch out for Austria externalizing borders // conviction of smuggler in Libya // updates in Serbia and France // lots of government problems in the UK // and more…
FEATURE: “Lawyers and activists slam Greek court’s proceedings and decision to sentence four teenage Afghan refugees to 10-years in an adult jail”
Civil Fleet Reports on the Moria fire trials and how they were not up to legal standards:
“The trial of four Afghan teenagers jailed for 10 years each for starting a fire that destroyed a much-criticised refugee camp last year was not up to legal standards, observers have said. The youths were found guilty on Saturday of ‘arson with risk to human life’ for the fire that broke out at the vastly overcrowded Moria refugee camp on the Aegean island of Lesbos.
Greek authorities left about 12,000 people without help for days after the camp, originally built to house 3,000, was destroyed by the blaze before a new camp was hastily built on a former military firing range. The charges were brought against six Afghan youths — known to campaigners as the Moria Six — last year, and two of them were sentenced to five years in a juvenile prison in March.
When the latest trial began on Friday, the court blocked all members of the public — including journalists, legal observers and a representative from the United Nations rights agency (UNHCR) — from attending. None of the 15 prosecution witnesses who testified against the youngsters had seen them on the night of the fire.
‘The only witness who identified the accused did not present himself to the court. His written testimony was full of inconsistencies,’ the youths’ lawyer Natasha Dailiani said on Saturday.
Despite the fact that three of the youths were under 18 at the time of fire, the judge rejected the defense’s application on Friday to try them in a juvenile court, meaning they will carry out their sentence in an adult prison. After the trial, defense lawyer Effie Doussi said: ‘We will exhaust all legal remedies to ensure that the accused get a fair trial and a clear verdict showing that they are innocent.’”
LIBYA
SEA
GREECE
40 NGOs denounce Greece’s decision to deem Turkey “safe”
They state: “The substantive examination of asylum applications is the only safe solution for refugees.”
“With a new Joint Ministerial Decision (JMD) issued on 7 June,[i] the Greek State designates Turkey as a “safe third country” for families, men, women and children of five nationalities[ii] seeking international protection in Greece. It is noted that the JMD applies even to those from countries with high recognition rates for international protection, such as Syria, Afghanistan and Somalia.[iii] This decision reinforces the policy established by the March 2016 EU-Turkey Statement that shifts the responsibility to protect refugees, including unaccompanied children,[iv] arriving in Europe to third countries.”
Amnesty International’s Glykeria Arapi, director of the Greek Section, said:
“This decision is another dangerous step towards dismantling asylum in Europe. Greece reveals its brutal intentions to deny protection at all costs, designating Turkey safe for even more nationalities…”
SERBIA
AUSTRIA
Watching how Vienna’s International Centre for Migration Policy Development (ICMPD) externalizes Austria’s border control
Naceur continues “ICMPD’s expansion substantially accelerates since its current director Spindelegger took over in 2016. Under his leadership, ICMPD-s staff almost doubled, its annual budget tripled and the number of duty stations rose from 19 to 30’. Spindelegger called ICMPD an ‘intergovernmental mediation platform & think tank for future migration policy issues.’ In contrast, others refer to it as a ‘leading consultancy institution that aims at the Europeanization of migration policies’ & a ‘neoliberal political project.’” More from Naceur’s thread here.
Austria is also expanding its police presence in Serbia. The government is worried about the increase of people coming from the Balkans. Read about it here.
FRANCE
SPAIN
No Name Kitchen comes with an important report on the state of unaccompanied minors in Ceuta
UK
Refugee week started Monday
There is some good news this refugee week: Ceredigion has successfully hosted many Syrians refugee families over the past five years. Learn more about their solidarity efforts here.
Also NGOs are coming together to take a strong stance against Priti Patel’s hard line. Read more about it here.
“The asylum seekers left to go hungry after cash card delays”
Huck mag reports: “A Home Office error over a new card changeover has left thousands of asylum seekers penniless, as well as placing a huge strain on migrant charities forced to step in where the Government has failed to.”
“Asylum seekers get a paltry £39.63 a week on a type of debit card called an ‘Aspen card’. These were governed by a private company called Sodexo, until a new contract was taken over on May 21 2020 by Prepaid Financial Services (PFS), meaning all cards had to be replaced.
It was during this changeover period that cards were not turning up, could not be activated, had wrong names printed or had zero funds. And close to three weeks later, the situation has still not been resolved, nor have the Home Office publicly acknowledged what charities are now calling a crisis.
Around 61,000 asylum seekers receive Home Office financial support and more than 55,000 use Aspen cards. Asylum seekers are banned from working to supplement the Home Office money and they cannot open UK bank accounts so can only receive extra money from friends, family or charities as cash-in-hand. The botched rollout has left people penniless and hungry.
Charities have been firefighting the fall-out of this and stumping up the money to ensure everyone has some food. ‘Although this situation is unique because it’s happened all at once, we have seen The Home Office failing time and time again. We are quite used to stepping in and having to rally the troops of volunteers,’ says Imogen McIntosh, founder and director of Bristol-based humanitarian organisation, Aid Box Community (ABC).
Many are asking why this was allowed to happen. The government knew there would be a changeover period, so surely some technical issues were foreseen. A Home Office spokesperson said to Huck: ‘We have worked closely to develop customer services processes and plan for a number of eventualities.’ It’s a statement at odds with reality.”
What’s going to happen to unaccompanied minors arriving in Kent now?
Kentlive reports:
“Fears have been raised that unaccompanied child refugees arriving in Dover will be ‘detained’ at a controversial facility. It comes after Kent County Council announced on Thursday (June 10) that it no longer has capacity to care for unaccompanied children arriving on small boats.
The announcement has left some of the most vulnerable people making their way to the UK in a state of limbo, unable to be housed in safe and secure accommodation. Council leader Roger Gough said he was ‘profoundly saddened’ at the situation — the second time it has arisen in the last year.
Under the previous National Transfer Scheme, the government would help local councils deal with the administrative and practical side of housing asylum seekers, and allowed for transfers from areas like Kent — which see a large number of entries — to other parts of the country. However, this scheme was disrupted by COVID-19 and funding issues. For the last two years Kent’s ability to take care of these vulnerable young people, many of whom will be granted asylum in the UK, has been stretched to ‘breaking point.’
Last week Cllr Gough blamed the government for not taking action, adding that the council’s support resources have become ‘significantly overwhelmed.’”
“Home Office condemned for forcing migrants on bail to wear GPS tags”
The Guardian reports:
“More than 40 human rights organisations have condemned the Home Office’s introduction of 24-hour GPS monitoring of people on immigration bail in an expansion of surveillance powers that has involved no consultation process.
The new policy marks a shift from using radio frequency monitors (which alert authorities if the wearer leaves an assigned area) to round-the-clock GPS trackers (which can track a person’s every move), while also giving the Home Office new powers to collect, store and access this data indefinitely via a private contractor.
Rudy Schulkind, at Bail for Immigration Detainees, said: ‘This is effectively an extension of immigration detention beyond the physical walls of the detention centres and prisons…This regressive and authoritarian policy is wholly inappropriate in a country that claims to uphold the right to liberty.’”
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