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#napier barracks
mariacallous · 1 year
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Actions have consequences. Britain’s political elite has for a long time decided to pander to – or deliberately stoke – bigotry against migrants and refugees. This is a joint enterprise with rightwing media outlets that have sought to portray some of the world’s most vulnerable people as a marauding mob, undeserving drains on resources and incompatible with British culture. It has reaped rich political dividends: justified public anger at a lack of affordable housing and secure work, declining living standards and austerity has been redirected, crudely, at the caricatured foreigner. To achieve this aim, it has been necessary to strip migrants and refugees of their humanity: after all, most human beings do not tolerate harm being committed against those we see as “people like us”.
This brings us to the Manston migrant processing centre, in Kent, and the petrol bombs that were lobbed on Sunday at a Dover Border Force immigration centre. Most people would find the conditions at Manston intolerable if it were housing cats and dogs, let alone people. Around 4,000 people seeking asylum – way more than double the official maximum capacity – sleep on blankets on floors. It is supposed to be a short-term holding facility, where checks are conducted before the people there are moved on to detention centres or accommodation. But these human beings are being effectively imprisoned for up to four weeks. In these bleak overcrowded conditions, there has been an outbreak of diphtheria, while scabies is said to run rampant.
You may ask yourselves whether this can possibly be legal. The answer is no, it isn’t. The home secretary, Suella Braverman, stands accused of ignoring advice that it is against the law to detain asylum seekers for so long in these abhorrent conditions. (The Home Office claims Braverman “has taken urgent decisions to alleviate issues at Manston and source alternative accommodation”.) She accordingly faces being taken to court by refugee charities.
That this pantomime rightwinger is farcically unsuitable to hold one of the great offices of state should now be clear to all but those afflicted with ultra-partisan bad faith. We now know that she sent official documents six times to her personal emails – a wanton violation of the ministerial code. Civil servants tell me they would be sacked for such egregious behaviour, but different standards apply to our senior politicians. Rishi Sunak put her there for two reasons: first, because her endorsement helped keep Boris Johnson from standing for party leader again; and second, because a government intent on renewed unpopular austerity measures will seek to deflect public anger by pressing a big red button labelled “culture war”.
But however much justified condemnation Braverman receives for her email misconduct, it is her treatment of human beings that deserves most ire.
Indeed, Sir Roger Gale, the Tory MP who represents the constituency in which Manston is situated, has condemned the government’s policy. He has suggested that a deliberate decision had been taken not to book space in local hotels, leading to disastrous overcrowding and inhumane conditions. (A Home Office spokesperson later told the BBC: “Claims advice was deliberately ignored are completely baseless.”)A local refugee campaigner, Bridget Chapman, puts to me that the authorities learned cynical lessons from another holding centre, the Napier barracks in Folkestone, where campaigners and journalists were able to talk to asylum seekers and learn about the conditions there. I myself visited: people who had fled violence and persecution in countries such as Iran and Afghanistan were living in conditions that violated basic sanitary and hygiene requirements. But such access has been largely denied in Manston, where conditions are accordingly even worse.
Manston is shrouded in other myths, too. “Lots of establishment media outlets are pushing the idea that everyone is from Albania and largely adult men who are economic migrants,” says another local refugee campaigner, Benny Hunter. “I wouldn’t want to pander to the idea that men aren’t vulnerable or [that] Albanians aren’t potentially refugees, but when we went, we saw families with young children, who shouted over the fence that they were from Syria, Iran, Afghanistan, Iraq – places with war, conflict and despotism.”
While the circumstances behind the Dover petrol bomb are yet to be uncovered, there are some things of which we can be certain. Public hostility to desperate people fleeing to our shores has been systematically ramped up by politicians, newspapers and broadcasters. With legal routes closed off, asylum seekers arriving on small boats are portrayed as a sinister invading force. Local citizens languishing on social housing waiting lists (because of politicians’ refusal to build council homes) or stuck waiting weeks for GP appointments (because of an underfunded health service) are led to believe that the problem lies with desperate newcomers. The likes of Braverman are there to shield the political elite from their failure to provide the citizens of a wealthy nation with a comfortable standard of living and adequate public provision, refocusing resentment on all the wrong targets. In the process, they have inflicted cruelty on often already traumatised people. That there is finally, at least, some outcry at this travesty is to be welcomed. But until we stop allowing politicians and their media allies to scapegoat asylum seekers for problems caused by the powerful, these scandals will happen again and again.
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earhartsease · 5 months
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gwydionmisha · 1 year
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antifainternational · 3 years
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May 22, Folkestone - Empty the barracks, Close the camps
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According to Priti Patel, this is fine, and it’s insulting to say this is inadequate.
This is a disgrace and we should be screaming about it. This is not an acceptable way to house anyone. Asylum seekers deserve humane treatment.
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scavengedluxury · 3 years
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Prison camp enthusiast Priti Patel catching a big L today.✌️
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eaglesnick · 3 years
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All Our Yesterdays: Day 247
28.03.20. Independent:
“Coronavirus: Dozens of asylum seekers forced to eat in communal area in breach of Covid-10 measure.”
Priti Patel, our right-wing Home Secretary, recently introduced her new asylum seeker plans, insisting they do not break international law, despite fears to the contrary. Under the new scheme any asylum seeker entering Britain “illegally” will find it much harder to claim sanctuary. Instead, Ms Patel will “seek to rapidly return inadmissible asylum seekers to the safe country of most recent embarkation contingent on securing returns agreements”.  The fact that no such agreements exist has not escaped notice, and some have described the new scheme “inhumane."
Ms Patel insists, “while people are dying we have a responsibility to act.” Fine words, but they are only words. The reality is somewhat different.  Proven bully Patel, one year on from the headline above, has much to answer for. If she really felt the “responsibility” to act to save lives then why are we still reading headlines like this?
09.03.21. Evening Post:
“Asylum seekers were housed in ‘filthy’ and 'cramped' conditions which made Covid outbreaks 'virtually inevitable' "
A report by her own government was highly critical of the Home Office and its treatment of asylum seekers. It found  conditions were so bad in some instances that the people being housed felt depressed, suicidal, and  callously subjected to increased risk of catching Covid-19.
What was Ms Patel’s response to nearly 200 asylum seekers being tested positive for coronavirus at Napier Barracks, where overcrowding was endemic?   Blame the victims for “mingling”.
WE SO MUCH DESERVE BETTER
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whenasparrowfalls · 3 years
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rightsinexile · 3 years
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Housing migrants at Napier barracks unlawful, UK court rules
This opinion piece was written by The British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) on 3 June 2021. 
The UK Home Office's decision to house cross-channel migrants in a "squalid" barracks in Folkestone was unlawful, the High Court has ruled.
Six asylum seekers brought the case, claiming Napier Barracks was "unsafe" and dormitory use caused a COVID-19 outbreak earlier this year.
The ruling could see a damages claim against Home Secretary Priti Patel.
The Home Office said use of the barracks would continue, and it was considering its "next steps".
The judgment could lead to further cases from any other men held at the camp who can bring similar evidence to court.
Mr Justice Linden's judgment looked in detail at a fire that broke out at the site in January, and when nearly 200 people contracted coronavirus during an outbreak at the camp. [Read more here.
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smilemistyknight · 3 years
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gwydionmisha · 3 years
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bookloversofbath · 2 years
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A Borrowed Place: The History of Hong Kong :: Frank Welsh
A Borrowed Place: The History of Hong Kong :: Frank Welsh
A Borrowed Place: The History of Hong Kong :: Frank Welsh soon to be presented for sale on the marvellous BookLovers of Bath web site! New York, Tokyo & London: Kodansha International, 1993, Hardback in dust wrapper. Black & white photographs; Maps; Tables; Maps to the lining papers; Appendices (2); Includes: Black & white photographs; Maps; Tables; Maps to the lining papers; Appendices (2); From…
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instadw · 3 years
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Napier Barracks: Housing migrants at barracks unlawful, court rules
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dailynewsvideo · 3 years
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Napier Barracks: Five arrests over asylum centre fire
Napier Barracks: Five arrests over asylum centre fire
image copyrightPA Mediaimage captionA fire was started in one building at the site and windows were smashed, the Home Office said Five men have been arrested after a fire at a former barracks where asylum seekers are being held. Kent Police said one man was held on suspicion of assaulting a security guard and four in connection with the fire at Napier Barracks on Friday. The Home Office had…
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