What do you think the root of the problem is in Jamaica?

Saturday, May 1, 2010

Could this woman's fight change the way Britain treats asylum seekers?

Could this woman's fight change the way Britain treats asylum seekers?

Most of the desperate mothers who are held at Yarl's Wood are quickly deported: now four of them are taking the Home Office to court, citing violations of their human rights amid nightmarish conditions. Mark Townsend reports

Mark Townsend The Observer, Sunday 11 April 2010 Article history



Reetha Suppiah was held at Yarls Wood Detention Centre. Photograph: Christopher Thomond / Guardian

The knock on the door came at dawn. Outside the modest terraced house in Bury, Lancashire, police and home office officials told Reetha Suppiah she was being deported to Malaysia, where she had been repeatedly beaten and tortured after rejecting an arranged marriage.

She remembers being "bundled into a white van with caged windows" and driven south for almost four hours. Then, just after 11am on 7 February, Suppiah and her two young children arrived at Yarl's Wood, the immigration detention centre at the centre of abuse allegations that are vehemently contested by the Home Office.

Most of the women who enter Yarl's Wood are held, then deported and never heard of again. But Suppiah's account of what happened that February morning could shape the future of Britain's detention policy. Her story forms a central component of a legal challenge to what her lawyers call the "inhumane and degrading" conditions experienced in Yarl's Wood, the only immigration centre to hold only women and children.

As the wider debate on immigration shifts to the front line of the election battlefield, a judicial review is to pit the claims of Suppiah and three other women against the government. Lawyers believe the outcome could transform the treatment of asylum seekers.

Suppiah had been inside Yarl's Wood for only a matter of minutes when she says officers forced her 22-month-old son, Emmanuel, to stand with his arms outstretched while they searched him, an act that his mother describes as "grossly disproportionate". She said: "He asked me, 'What have I stolen mummy?' I could not understand why they were treating my baby like this."

Suppiah, 36, had fled to England in January 2008 to safeguard her children after death threats from her relatives intensified following a campaign of what she describes as 10 years of unrelenting torture.

Inside Yarl's Wood, she noted a marked decline in the welfare of her two boys. Emmanuel began to lose weight and regularly vomited. Lawyers who met him on 23 February described him as a withdrawn child who cried frequently and did not smile. Suppiah, they noted, "wept constantly".

Her eldest son, Danahar, 12, related how a teacher at the centre's school told him he was in "prison" waiting to be sent back to his own country.

Within days of arrival, Emmanuel and Danahar contracted diarrhoea. Their mother says she had to ask three times before receiving antibiotics. Suppiah also claims medication for her pre-existing chest condition was confiscated when she arrived.

The family say they were locked in their room for long periods with staff free to enter without knocking. "Suppiah was afforded no privacy, and legal documents were not passed to her promptly," according to her lawyers.

After three weeks, Suppiah and her children were released, driven to nearby Bedford, handed train tickets and left to make their way back to Bury.

Lawyers say the family remain so traumatised by the experience that they show signs of being "tortured emotionally and physically".

Suppiah said: "We have been in a terrible state ever since; my sons keep crying and I am shaken. I came here because I thought it was a fair country. Now they say I overstayed, but we have no idea if we can stay or what the future holds."


In a sense, Suppiah and her family were lucky. There are far graver allegations contained in the documents that will be examined as part of the judicial review. They detail allegations of physical and racist abuse made by Suppiah's fellow litigants, Denise McNeil, Shaunice Bignall-Young and Sakinat Bello.

One of the women, McNeil, is no stranger to violence. Raised in Jamaica, two brothers and a sister were murdered in gangland feuds and she suffered 13 years of domestic abuse by her partner. Yarl's Wood was almost as bad.

Legal papers allege that McNeil was attacked by staff during an incident inside the centre on 8 February, the day after Suppiah's arrival. They claim she was "assaulted repeatedly and violently assaulted by a [named] officer, on one occasion so violently that she lost consciousness". Later, staff allegedly kicked her in a leg, already badly injured after being caught in gangland crossfire in Jamaica as a child.

Bignall-Young, 26, claims she was kicked in the face by an officer during the same incident. A senior UK Border Agency officer is said to have visited her the following day, where she revealed "severe bruising".

Their accounts are rejected by government officials, who say independent monitors and CCTV recorded the incidents and found nothing untoward.

McNeil has testified that officers stole £390 from her as she was held in isolation. Correspondence received by the Home Office claims: "Many officers in Yarl's Wood have sex with detainees and smoke in their rooms. The claimant has been forced to strip for search in an apparently arbitrary basis and has regularly been threatened and verbally abused by staff."

Bignall-Young, who arrived in London from Jamaica in 2000 after fleeing from a relative who was physically and sexually abusive, reveals how on one occasion she removed her clothes after Yarl's Wood staff ordered a search. A male officer allegedly filmed the incident and told a colleague recently arrived at the scene: "You'll be sorry you missed the breasts."

A week after being allegedly assaulted, McNeil was told her attempts to stay in the UK had failed.


The listing of ill-treatment claims goes on. McNeil said she spent the first night in a cell with no blanket. Bignall-Young has been separated from her six-year-old son since being sent to Yarl's Wood just before Christmas. Three days after the alleged assault, 11 February, she climbed on to a cupboard and attempted to hang herself using shoelaces.

She told the Observer: "I don't know what is happening and cannot bear to be separated from my child any longer. I am in complete limbo."

The Home Office maintains that all four have been found by judges to have no right to stay in the UK and "have attacked and abused our staff" while Bignall-Young and McNeil have criminal records. The women are adamant they will suffer harm – even death – if they are deported. McNeil, whose convictions include cannabis possession, is terrified of reprisals. Last year, social services travelled to Jamaica to interview her former partner. He said that her life would be in danger if she returned.


Last month, the High Court ruled that it would hear the women's claims, a development that means the Home Office will be obliged to demonstrate in open court how Yarl's Wood complies with the UK's obligation to asylum seekers and to defend the centre against charges that its treatment of asylum-seeking women and children constitutes a "systematic disregard for human dignity".

Lawyers maintain that the treatment of Suppiah and the other women breaches the European convention on human rights, including article three, which states that no one shall face "torture, punishment or inhuman or degrading treatment" or unlawful detention.

Jim Duffy, of Public Interest Lawyers, a law firm that specialises in human rights, said they hoped the judicial review could prompt an official inquiry into the allegations of "systemic ill-treatment" and end child detention in the UK.

He said: "Yarl's Wood is a stain on our international reputation and the government's tired excuses for it are becoming increasingly tenuous with every passing day."

The Home Office response has been unequivocal, rejecting all allegations as "unfounded" and vowing to "rigorously defend any allegations through the courts". A statement adds: "Yarl's Wood is a well run centre with highly professional and caring staff." But within the next few months, the High Court will be listening to Reetha Suppiah's side of the story.

ASYLUM FACTS
■ There were 25,670 asylum applications to the UK in 2008 compared with a peak of 84,130 in 2002. Nineteen out of every 100 applications are successful, according to the Home Office.


■ The UK was ranked 17th in the league table of industrialised countries for the number of asylum applications per head of population, according to the United Nations in 2008.


■ The weekly allowance for asylum seekers will be reduced from £42 to £35, a cut of nearly 20%, the UK Border Agency has revealed.


■ The Home Office detains around 1,000 asylum-seeking children with their families each year. Yarl's Wood has 405 beds, of which 284 are for single women and 121 for families.


■ A total of 1,271 children were held in detention last year, with 232 detained for more than a month.

2 Jamaican seamen rescued from 34-day ordeal


2 Jamaican seamen rescued from 34-day ordeal


(Posted: 27/04/10) 2 engines failed, 3 seamen die, bodies thrown overboard... After being aided by a merchant vessel, two Jamaican men who were lost at sea for some 34 days are in Belize tonight.


After being aided by a merchant vessel, two Jamaican men who were lost at sea for some 34 days are in Belize tonight.

A ranking official from the Belize National Coast Guard spoke with Amandala today, saying that these men were part of a crew of five who left Jamaica’s Pedro Bank on a fishing expedition on March 21, 2010, on a fishing vessel, the Gentle Breeze, equipped with two engines.

The official also confirmed that the vessel’s engines lost power on March 22, and the crew had no access to communications equipment.

As a result, the vessel was forced to remain adrift at sea, along with its crew, for a total of 34 days with limited provisions until earlier this Sunday, April 25, when a merchant vessel, the Carib Navigator, which was on its way to Belize City, chanced upon the Gentle Breeze at about 60 nautical miles southeast of Belize’s San Pedro, near Chinero, Mexico.

The information from the coast guard official is that only two men from the crew of five survived, and they had been transported to the Belize Defence Force Price Barracks Medical Center in Ladyville for the treatment of extreme dehydration, weakness and malnutrition. They were later transferred to the Karl Heusner Memorial Hospital.

The Jamaican men, whose names have not been released, were interviewed and they informed Belize authorities that three of the crew died and because of the advanced state of decomposition, the bodies, regrettably, were thrown overboard.

It was reported that there are plans by the Immigration Department to send the men home to Jamaica after they have received adequate treatment.

Another source told Amandala that the Carib Navigator attempted to tow the Gentle Breeze, but the vessel broke apart and is still adrift at sea.

Belize News - Belize Leading Newspaper | Breaking News - Amandala Online

Naturalization ceremony for US service members at White House

Naturalization ceremony for US service members at White House - pictures
April 25, 3:20 PM · Christine Nyholm - Social Justice Examiner


A naturalization ceremony was held at the White House on Friday, April 23, 2010. President Obama delivered remarks at the ceremony in the Rose Garden of the White House, recognizing contributions made by immigrant members of the U.S. Armed Forces. These immigrant military members have earned American citizenship through service to the United Sates.

Alejandro Mayorkas, Director of U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) within the Department of Homeland Security, presented the candidates for citizenship, and Secretary Janet Napolitano administered the oath of citizenship.

Sergeant Ledum Ndaanee, U.S. Marine Corps - Outstanding American by Choice



President Barack Obama watches the swearing in of active duty service members at a naturalization ceremony in the Rose Garden of the White House in Washington, Friday April 23, 2010.
(AP Photo/J. David Ake)

President Obama presented Sergeant Ledum Ndaanee, U.S. Marine Corps (E-5) with the Outstanding American by Choice recognition, which highlights the outstanding achievements of naturalized U.S. Citizens. Sergeant Ledum Ndaanee was born in Nigeria on May 2, 1982. He moved to the United States with his family, who settled in Richmond, Virginia, when he was 16 years old. After attending a local community college, Sgt. Ndaanee had his heart set on serving his new country by joining the U.S. Marine Corps. He enlisted in September 2004.


Sgt. Ndaanee was deployed to Iraq twice. In 2007 he suffered a concussion and traumatic brain injury as the result of an improvised explosive device. While recovering from his injuries at Wounded Warrior Battalion-East in Camp Lejeune, NC, Sgt. Ndaanee played a vital role in the recovery process of his fellow Marines and Sailors. He was instrumental in encouraging others to overcome their injuries by serving as a mentor. After recovering from his wounds, Sgt. Ndaanee achieved an important milestone in his life by becoming a U.S. citizen in November 2007.


Sgt. Ndaanee is currently serving as the non-commissioned Officer-in-Charge of the Warrior Athlete Reconditioning (WAR) Program’s Strength and Conditioning Team and is also a member of the aquatics team within Wounded Warrior Battalion-East. Over the course of his military career, Sgt. Ndaanee has been recognized with several honors including the Good Conduct Medal, Purple Heart Combat Action Ribbon, Iraq Campaign Medal, Sea Service Deployment Ribbon, Global War on Terrorism Service Medal, and the National Defense Service Medal.



Service members becoming American citizens:

Michael Zach Armstrong was born is England and serves in the U.S. Army.
Lenard Canlas Belvis was born in the Philippines and serves in the U.S. Air Force Reserve.
Tei Aristide Bislao was born in Togo and serves in the U.S. Navy.
Anthony Cabalerro was born in Spain and serves in the U.S. Navy.
Maria-Antonette Capio Cabantog was born in the Philippines and serves in the U.S. Air Force.
Perla Conception Ramos de Chavira was born in Mexico and serves in the U.S. Navy.
Rommel Cruz Cuenco was born in the Philippines and serves in the U.S. Navy.
Affeya Tiffany Christine Grant was born in Jamaica and serves in the U.S. Navy.
Therica Tameica Hutchinson was born in Jamaica and serves in the U.S. Army.
Oscar Gaspar Manrique was born in Peru and serves in the U.S. Air Force.
Granger Lawrence Michael was born in New Guinea and serves in the U.S. Marine Corps.
Roosevelt Joseph was born in Haiti and serves in the U.S. Navy,.
Raquel De Olivera Moura was born in Brazil and serves in the U.S. Navy.
James Nyaga Muchoki was born in Kenya and serves in the U.S. Army.
Jerdaine Devon Oldacre was born in Jamaica and serves in the U.S. Navy.
Soraya Conceicao Ross was born in Brazil and serves in the U.S. Marine Corps.
Charlyston Schultz was born in Brazil and serves in the U.S. Marine Corps.
Raul Pagaduan Sibayan was born in the Philippines and serves in the U.S. Army.
Andrew Hopeton Smith was born in Jamaica and serves in the U.S. Army.
Marcin Dominik Staniszewski was born in Poland and serves in the U.S. Marine Corps.
Berhan Kifetew Teferi in Ethiopia and serves in the U.S. Army.
Pitrianne Natoya Williams, U.S. Navy, Jamaica
Yu Yuan was born in China and serves in the U.S. Air Force.
Jhonathan Zapata Garcia was aborn in Columbia and serves in the U.S. Navy.

President Barack Obama watches the swearing in of active duty service members at a naturalization ceremony in the Rose Garden of the White House in Washington, Friday April 23, 2010.
(AP Photo/J. David Ake)

College principal sentenced over immigration scam


College principal sentenced over immigration scam
(UKPA) – 1 day ago


A college principal, from Middlesex, once feted as education's "wonder woman" is due to be sentenced for providing immigration services when not qualified to do so.

Roselle Antoine, who was honoured with an MBE for her services to education, lured overseas students into paying thousands of pounds in fees for fake courses.

The 55-year-old promised visas to overseas students if they enrolled at TCS Tutorial College in north-west London. But the courses were fake, the so-called qualifications were not worth the paper they were written on, and the students wasted years of study, leaving some more than £2,500 out of pocket, London's Southwark Crown Court was told.

Antoine was honoured with an MBE for her services to education and not all of the students at the college were on fake courses, the jury was told. But prosecutor Ben Lloyd said that did not excuse the occasions when the line was crossed and the law broken.

Susan Hall, Harrow Council's portfolio holder for the environment and community safety, said Antoine "posed as an educational saviour of the disadvantaged, but in reality was operating a cynical racket". She said: "Antoine scattered worthless NVQ certificates around like confetti. The only thing that many students at this college learned was the reality of fraud. Some spent years in fruitless study and were thousands of pounds down at the end of the experience."

She added that Harrow Council has already asked Ofsted to investigate this college "as a matter of urgency".

One of Antoine's victims, Auvalyn Howell, from north-west London, studied with TCS Tutorial College for four years but left without any valid qualifications. "I can't believe I have been made such a fool of," she said.

Miss Howell, who is originally from Jamaica, said she had initially thought Antoine was one of the nicest people she had ever known. "I thought she was trustworthy. I had no reason whatsoever to doubt her," she said.

Miss Howell, who is now studying for a degree in health and well-being, said Antoine had cost her more than £5,000.

Antoine, of Shelley Close, Greenford, was found guilty of eight counts of providing immigration services when not qualified to do so, and four counts of knowingly making a false statement. But she was cleared of eight counts of providing immigration advice when not qualified to do so and five counts of recklessly making a false statement, plus one of knowingly making a false statement.

Copyright © 2010 The Press Association. All rights reserved.

Hundreds of fugitive immigrants arrested in federal crackdown


Posted on Sat, May. 01, 2010
Hundreds of fugitive immigrants arrested in federal crackdown
BY ALFONSO CHARDY

achardy@MiamiHerald.com


In the pre-dawn darkness Wednesday, a small party of federal agents gathered in the parking lot of a strip mall at the corner of Northwest 67th Avenue and the Palmetto Expressway.
They strapped on bullet-proof vests with the legend POLICE ICE on the front and back. Then, they discussed plans to pick up their ``targets,'' fugitive foreign nationals convicted of crimes and marked for deportation.

As dawn lit the sky, the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers climbed aboard five vehicles and drove in a convoy to the homes of two ``targets,'' residents of separate apartment complexes in Miami Gardens. Though neither man was found, other federal officers elsewhere around the country and in Puerto Rico detained 596 foreign-born fugitive criminal convicts in a vast sweep as part of Operation Cross Check.

Three other foreign nationals arrested had no criminal convictions, but were not simply undocumented immigrants. One was wanted for murder for hire in Orange County, Florida, and the other two had been previously deported and had returned.

Of the 599 people arrested, 544 are men and 55 are women. They are from 60 countries in Latin America, Asia, Europe, the Middle East and Africa.

Arrests in Florida and Puerto Rico accounted for the largest number of detentions during the operation with a total of 258 taken into custody, ICE officials said. Arrests in Florida included 48 in Miami-Dade, 24 in Broward, 11 in West Palm Beach and five in Monroe.

The majority of those arrested in Florida and Puerto Rico were from Mexico (63) followed by Jamaica (29), Honduras (28), Dominican Republic (18), Colombia (16) and Guatemala (14).

One of the South Florida detainees identified by ICE is José Oscar Avalo-Molina of El Salvador, detained Wednesday in Pembroke Park. Avalo-Molina, whose convictions include first-degree murder, was deported in 1997 but had returned.

Cross Check was one of the largest sweeps of foreign criminal convicts since ICE was created in 2003 in the aftermath of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks.

Two previous similar operations that netted an average of more than 200 arrests each occurred in Texas in February and California in September.

John Morton, assistant secretary for Immigration and Customs Enforcement, said at a Washington, D.C. news conference Friday that the vast majority of the detainees were fugitives, have criminal convictions and final orders of deportation.

In some cases, some had been previously deported and had illegally reentered the country. They included criminals convicted of serious crimes including murder, assault, sex offenses, drug trafficking, alien smuggling, burglary and theft.

``It was an extremely successful operation,'' said Morton. ``The most successful that we've had to date.''

ICE operations in which foreign nationals are detained for deportation have become increasingly controversial among immigrant rights groups frustrated with President Barack Obama's failure to push immigration reform as a national priority.

Obama on Wednesday signaled a possible decision to withdraw immigration reform from the national agenda of priorities saying there ``may not be an appetite'' in Congress this year for legalization of undocumented immigrants.

Immigrant rights activists have focused their objections on what they say is growing collaboration between ICE and local law enforcement in identifying and detaining foreign nationals, and that in the sweeps for criminals, noncriminal undocumented immigrants also get picked up.

ICE officials insisted that all the detainees were criminal convicts and that their focus remains the detention and deportation of dangerous foreign-born criminals.

During the early morning operation Wednesday in Miami Gardens, local police did not participate directly in arrest efforts.

Federal officers did call Miami Gardens police just before they moved in on the first target and asked that the department send a uniformed officer.

The idea was not to seek assistance for the arrest but to reassure local residents that the operation was legitimate since local police were present.





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Jamaican police arrest man over British honorary consul's death

Jamaican police arrest man over British honorary consul's death
Security guard, 23, held in connection with death of John Terry, found with cord round his neck in September

Adam Gabbatt and agencies guardian.co.uk, Friday 23 April 2010 11.34 BST


John Terry, a British honorary consul in Jamaica, was found dead with a cord round his neck in September. Photograph: Pat Roxborough-Wright/AP

The Jamaican authorities have charged a man in connection with the killing of a British honorary consul on the island last year.

The assistant police commissioner, Les Green, yesterday identified the suspect as 23-year-old Richard Ewan, a security guard from Montego Bay.

John Terry, 65, who was described by the foreign secretary, David Miliband, as a "key member of our team", was found outside his home in Mount Carey St James in September. He had a cord tied round his neck and appeared to have been beaten, local officials said at the time.

Green said Ewan had known Terry.

The Jamaica Observer reported that Ewan was charged with conspiracy to murder after a police interview on Wednesday.

Jamaican police and the British high commission in Jamaica were unavailable for comment.

Terry, originally from New Zealand, had lived in Jamaica since 1967, and represented the British high commission on the island's western end. He was awarded an OBE in 1992.

Honorary consuls are volunteers, paid a small sum – typically around £2,000 a year – for representing British nationals in difficulties, acting as a UK link with local industries and representing embassies and high commissions at parties and public functions.

With more than 1,600 killings last year, Jamaica has one of the highest murder rates in the world.

UK Diaspora Prepares for Jamaican Conference

UK Diaspora Prepares for Jamaican Conference


LONDON (JIS):
Thursday, April 29, 2010



The Jamaican Diaspora UK is preparing for the fourth Biennial Jamaican Diaspora Conference, which will be held in Ocho Rios from June 14 to 17 this year.

A special pre conference meeting was held by the group last weekend in Birmingham, to discuss a range of topics and issues that will form part of the UK group's input on the agenda.

Diaspora Advisory Board member, Mrs. Celia Grandison Markey, told JIS News that the meeting, which included a number of specialist workshops, was held to ensure that Jamaicans in the United Kingdom (UK) had an input into the Jamaican convention.

"The general idea is to ensure that Jamaicans in the UK have an input into the convention and to identify more readily with the Diaspora movement, with the conference and to see that they too can have a say in shaping the future (of the movement) and future conferences," Mrs. Grandison Markey said.

The one day meeting also reviewed the conference agenda, and discussed the nomination process for the Advisory Board members. The workshops focused on youth involvement, the accountability of Regional Co-ordinators and looked at recommendations for ensuring the financial stability of the UK group.

Mrs. Grandison Markey said one topic on which more time should be devoted was encouraging entrepreneurship among the younger members of the Jamaican Diaspora.

She said there were many aspiring young businessmen and women within the Diaspora and that the conference should engage them and highlight their work, encourage and offer assistance to them.

Acting Jamaican High Commissioner, Ms. Joan Thomas Edwards, said this year's conference, which for the first time is being held outside of Kingston, is taking place at a time when Jamaica is seeking to find a response to the global financial crisis.

Ms. Edwards said that the Government has put plans in place to steer the country out of this crisis, and that "partnership with our nationals overseas is critical to the process."

She said the UK Diaspora must continue its efforts to establish an effective lobby group to influence issues of concern to Jamaica and Jamaicans in the UK.

The Acting High Commissioner also urged Jamaicans in the UK to participate in the upcoming British national elections.