Skip to content or view screen version

UK-wide Day of Action Against Deportations to DR Congo

imc-uk-features | 18.04.2007 11:49 | Migration

Thursday, 12th April, saw a national day of action to protest against deportations to the Democratic Republic of Congo. Nine coordinated protests took place in Birmingham [video], Cardiff, Glasgow, Leeds, Leicester, London [audio|video], Manchester, Newcastle and Nottingham. The protests, called by the Congo Support Project and supported by many other groups, including NCADC and No Borders, were to mark a Directions Hearing for the Country Guidance Tribunal regarding DRC asylum seekers facing mass deportation.

Earlier this year, in a Home Office operation named Castor, 38 DR Congolese nationals, including 21 children, were forcibly removed on a charter flight, operated by XL Airways, from Stanstead airport near London. There are signs that another 'operation' is already being planned.

taking the street
taking the street


In Birmingham, over 200 people protested at the immigration reporting centre in Solihull. The peaceful protest was marred by a large police presence and was penned, twice, into Sandford House's car park. Protesters, however, broke off after a while and blockaded the road for about 2 hours. Two people were arrested, one also assaulted by an aggressive cop. They were released later on but only because their fellow protesters, in an empowering show of solidarity, refused to leave the site before they were released. [Report | Photo report | Report & photos | Video]

In London, about 30 protesters gathered outside the Home Office on Marsham Street. The protest was relatively small, but the police presence was big (the ratio between police and protesters was two to one). Yet, the demonstration was lively, loud and there were some damn colourful shirts on display. Protesters sang and chanted for the entire two hours, and seemed ready for more noise as they left, when their permission to protest had expired and the police moved in to usher people on. [Report | Audio | Video]

In Nottingham, a demo organised by the local Congolese community with support from No Borders Nottingham and the Nottingham Refugee Campaign Group, attracted some 50 supporters, mostly Congolese. Protesters assembled in the Market Square where they remained for around an hour, before marching off to the Magistrates Court where they maintained a noisy presence. [Report and pics | Notts feature on DRC deportations]

Unfortunately, no reports on the other protests have (yet) been published.

No Deportation to DRC!

Since the DR Congo elections last year, described by most Western media as "democratic", more than 150 people have been gunned down by the security services in Bas-Congo for peacefully protesting against the election results. Hundreds more have been killed in Kinshasa in violent clashes between president Joseph Kabila's guards and forces loyal to his contender in the presidential elections, Jean-Pierre Bemba. Tens of thousands of people have been displaced by conflict in the eastern part of the country. Massacres, extra-judicial killings, forced disappearances, arbitrary arrests, torture and rape are endemic, while thousands continue to die each week as a result of starvation and disease.

Since 1998, the country has suffered greatly from the devastating Second Congo War (sometimes referred to as the African World War), the world's deadliest conflict since World War II, thanks to Western governments and corporations racing for the country's rich resources and supplying the fighting parties with deadly weapons. More than 3 million people have died since and, according to the United Nations, some 1000 people still die every day as a result of the conflict.

The Foreign Office is advising British nationals "not to travel at all" to eastern and north-eastern DRC and against "all but essential travel" to the rest of the country, as it is deemed "too unstable". Yet, the Home Office continues to 'remove' Congolese asylum seekers, including children born here to Congolese parents, to a place where they risk losing their lives.

imc-uk-features

Comments

Hide the following 4 comments

This action is misguided

19.04.2007 06:46

DRC is a big place. I live and work in the north-east, in general the most unstable part of the whole country. Even here, many people live here and work hard to improve the condition of themselves and their country, with the support of the UN, NGOs, and we are beginning to see more input from the government. Yes there are problems. But there are problems in all countries, and the same type of problems in almost all developing countries.

In the vast majority of this huge country there is peace and stability. It's a poor country, and will continue to be for some time, but this in itself is not sufficient reason to justify asylum in another country, unless you consider this to be reasonable for all people in all developing countries. Do that, and it is the relatively rich and educated who will be able to travel, and the poor who will be left behind without the people who could best help develop their country.

I appreciate your concerns, although it seems to me that most protestors may well be from DRC themselves and in fear of either their own or their friends' and family's deportment, so not the most objective of groups. I do, however, feel that this concern could be better addressed towards groups working to improve conditions within the DRC than to this aim.

AS


Contradictory comment:

19.04.2007 07:24

On the one hand you say that conditions are not so bad or are even usual for devloping countries, and that if the UK and others allow in Congolese asylum seekers, the wealthy will flee, leaving the poor to try and rebuild the society.

On the other hand you note that most of the protestors at these actions "may well be from DRC themselves and in fear of either their own or their friends' and family's deportment,"

It is a fear for the safety of oneself or ones family that should enable people to seek asylum and somehow you seem elsewhere in your article to ignore the many killings and beatings that are used to oppress opposition to Kabila's regime.

One of the points made in the audio from the London demo is that many Congolese are asylum seekers in neighbouring countries such as Zambia, Uganda and Tanzania. Perhaps the wealthy are more easily able to flee to the West, but they are not alone in that - hundreds of thousands of people have crossed the borders.

ftp


Being deported

19.04.2007 09:34

There is also the important issue that, once you are known to have sought asylum in another country (often for political reasons), you know that if you are handed back to the Congolese authorities your fate is likely to be very unpleasant indeed. That should be reason enough to not deport these people.

No Borders


Solidarity from Tyneside

20.04.2007 10:36

Dear friends,

Up and down the country groups have been protesting against the attacks on asylum rights. From school groups to church groups, from the uprising in Colnbrook to the hunger strikes in Yarlswood, from individual campaigns against deportation to demonstrations organised by the Iraqi, Zimbawean, Eritrean and Congolese communities, resistance has been steadily building.

Tyneside Community Action for Refugees (TCAR) calls on all those opposed to the current attacks on asylum seekers to join us in a national day of action in defence of asylum rights on Saturday 19th May.

The idea is simple. Together we are stronger. Instead of trying to organise one big demonstration in London or Manchester we are calling on groups around the country to organise a protest in their own town or city but on the same day.
The idea is for each group to have their own local demands. In Newcastle we are having a march and then a protest, involving street theatre about snatch squads, baloons with messages against the detention of children and much chanting. We can all make our own demands but we will be doing so at the same time.

If your group decides to join the day of action please could you let us know and we can publicise the growing list of participants.

Please join us. Solidarity is strength! Together we are stronger!
Tyneside Community Action for Refugees (TCAR)

TCAR
mail e-mail: tynesidecarn@yahoo.co.uk