Zimbabwean women behind the wire go on hunger strike
transmitter | 11.09.2007 18:29 | Migration | Birmingham
Five female detainees from Zimbabwe in Yarl's Wood detention centre have gone on hunger strike yesterday (Monday, 10 September). They are demanding to be released from detention.
transmitter
Additions
Update on Zimbabwean 'Hunger Strikers' at Yarl's Wood
12.09.2007 08:08
On Monday evening, I had a telephone conversation with four of the
five Zimbabwean female detainees who are currently on hunger strike
in Yarl's Wood Immigration Removal Centre. The detainees I spoke to
are: Faina Manuel Pondesi, Maud Kadangu Lennard, Zandile Sibanda and
Rose Phekani. (I will submit write-up of the details I gathered on
each of the women in separate emails.) They reported that there are
eight Zimbabwean women who are being held in Yarl's Wood at the
moment.
Faina Manuel Pondesi read to me the petition which the women who are
on hunger strike had, on the previous day, sent to the Home Office.
The petition was dated 9 August 2007 and it read:
We are failed asylum seekers and given the very desperate situation
in Zimbabwe which has been commented upon by the United Nations plus
all major countries including South Africa, we cannot condone the
return of us at this time. Please can you release us or hunger strike
on 10 September 2007.
Faina Pondesi, Maud Lennard, Zandile Sibanda and Rose Phekani, in
separate telephone conversations, all confirmed that this is what the
letter said and that they, together with Pauline Chitekeshe, signed
the petition. They also confined that they started the hunger strike
on Monday, September 10 and are going to stay on hunger strike until
their demands are met.
They all complain that they did not receive adequate legal
representation during the fast track process under which their
applications for political asylum were considered.
Faina Manuel Pondesi, Rose Phekani and Maud Lennard are Zimbabwean
nationals who used Malawian passports to come to the U.K. They have
no family, friends, relatives or support networks in Malawi where the
Home Office is planning to send them. They fear that the Malawian
government will pass them on into the hands of the Zimbabwean
authorities. (I have a statement from Matthew Nyashanu, the Movement
for Democratic Change (MDC) Secretary for Information and Publicity
(U.K. and Ireland) in which he points out that both the South African
and the Malawian governments are sending Zimbabweans who are deported
from the U.K. on to Zimbabwe and in which he is asking the British
government to reconsider its position. There is also some material
from Malawian newspapers which says more-or-less the same thing (I
will try and retrieve these and pass them on to you as well)).
The three women who hold Malawian passports reported that on Monday
evening they were called, separately, to meetings with Home Office
representatives in which they were given removal directions and a
letter which read:
I refer to your letter of 9 August 2007 in which you request
temporary admission/bail for yourself.
You are all detained because your asylum applications have been
considered under fast track procedures at Yarl's Wood. You have all,
already had your asylum applications refused and can be in no doubt
that the Secretary of State does not accept your claims. These
decisions to refuse you asylum have all been upheld by the AIT at
every stage of the appeal process. You therefore have little
incentive to respond to any terms of bail/temporary admission.
With regard to your specific fears of the country situation in
Zimbabwe, your concerns are noted and supported by objective
evidence. The Home Office published policy means that removals of
failed asylum seekers are not enforced to Zimbabwe and so I would
like to allay your fears of being forcibly returned. However, as the
Home Office plans to return you to Malawi (as your IS82's or
151A/B's) show, the country situation has no bearing in your
situation.
Yours faithfully
D Smith
CIO/HEO
five Zimbabwean female detainees who are currently on hunger strike
in Yarl's Wood Immigration Removal Centre. The detainees I spoke to
are: Faina Manuel Pondesi, Maud Kadangu Lennard, Zandile Sibanda and
Rose Phekani. (I will submit write-up of the details I gathered on
each of the women in separate emails.) They reported that there are
eight Zimbabwean women who are being held in Yarl's Wood at the
moment.
Faina Manuel Pondesi read to me the petition which the women who are
on hunger strike had, on the previous day, sent to the Home Office.
The petition was dated 9 August 2007 and it read:
We are failed asylum seekers and given the very desperate situation
in Zimbabwe which has been commented upon by the United Nations plus
all major countries including South Africa, we cannot condone the
return of us at this time. Please can you release us or hunger strike
on 10 September 2007.
Faina Pondesi, Maud Lennard, Zandile Sibanda and Rose Phekani, in
separate telephone conversations, all confirmed that this is what the
letter said and that they, together with Pauline Chitekeshe, signed
the petition. They also confined that they started the hunger strike
on Monday, September 10 and are going to stay on hunger strike until
their demands are met.
They all complain that they did not receive adequate legal
representation during the fast track process under which their
applications for political asylum were considered.
Faina Manuel Pondesi, Rose Phekani and Maud Lennard are Zimbabwean
nationals who used Malawian passports to come to the U.K. They have
no family, friends, relatives or support networks in Malawi where the
Home Office is planning to send them. They fear that the Malawian
government will pass them on into the hands of the Zimbabwean
authorities. (I have a statement from Matthew Nyashanu, the Movement
for Democratic Change (MDC) Secretary for Information and Publicity
(U.K. and Ireland) in which he points out that both the South African
and the Malawian governments are sending Zimbabweans who are deported
from the U.K. on to Zimbabwe and in which he is asking the British
government to reconsider its position. There is also some material
from Malawian newspapers which says more-or-less the same thing (I
will try and retrieve these and pass them on to you as well)).
The three women who hold Malawian passports reported that on Monday
evening they were called, separately, to meetings with Home Office
representatives in which they were given removal directions and a
letter which read:
I refer to your letter of 9 August 2007 in which you request
temporary admission/bail for yourself.
You are all detained because your asylum applications have been
considered under fast track procedures at Yarl's Wood. You have all,
already had your asylum applications refused and can be in no doubt
that the Secretary of State does not accept your claims. These
decisions to refuse you asylum have all been upheld by the AIT at
every stage of the appeal process. You therefore have little
incentive to respond to any terms of bail/temporary admission.
With regard to your specific fears of the country situation in
Zimbabwe, your concerns are noted and supported by objective
evidence. The Home Office published policy means that removals of
failed asylum seekers are not enforced to Zimbabwe and so I would
like to allay your fears of being forcibly returned. However, as the
Home Office plans to return you to Malawi (as your IS82's or
151A/B's) show, the country situation has no bearing in your
situation.
Yours faithfully
D Smith
CIO/HEO
Ambrose Musiyiwa
Homepage:
http://ambrosemusiyiwa.blogspot.com
Comments
Hide the following 6 comments
please please take these women's numbers off
11.09.2007 21:57
concerned
Don't Let Zandile, Rose, Zandile & Faina be Disappeared
11.09.2007 23:37
Solidarity is needed now - if you care and want to express solidarity give them a call
the abuse is already happenning courtesy of GSL UK Ltd on behalf of the Borders and Immigration Agency
so show some support - give them a call - give them a phone card - so they can call their loved ones or some lawyers or someone -send them some flowers, a card or a text
It's not hard really
start a relationship =:-)
Solidariy Is Strength!
abu nuwass
Rose Phekani needs urgent assistance
12.09.2007 17:38
Ambrose Musiyiwa
e-mail: amusiyiwa@yahoo.com
Homepage: http://ambrosemusiyiwa.blogspot.com/
Statement by Matthew Nyashanu, MDC Secretary for Information & Publicity (UK)
12.09.2007 23:26
Mr Nyashanu said:
"It's very dangerous to send them back to any country in Africa. The fact that they fled Zimbabwe and went into neighboring countries and again had to run away from those countries, explains that they felt unsafe in those countries as well. Most Southern African states support Robert Mugabe. Sending a Zimbabwean to Malawi or South Africa, especially if that person has been targeted by the CIO [Central Intelligence Organisation] is to give the Malawian and South African governments the green light to send that person back to Zimbabwe. That person will not be protected.
"What we need to put across is that is that Zimbabwe is a dangerous political terrain. To send anyone back there is to put an end to that person's life. Countries that have championed democracy should protect those that have slipped from the despotic regime. If they are sent back to Zimbabwe or wherever, these people will never be heard of again.
"There is no follow-up to check on their safety. The Zimbabwean government has passed so many laws to curtail the work of journalists and human rights organizations. The democratic space has been squeezed so much that journalists and local human rights groups are not able to track these people and report on what happens to them.
"If the British government acknowledges the repression being perpetrated against Zimbabweans, it would be simple reasoning that the same government cannot send people back to that despotic and oppressive regime.
"Many Zimbabweans we have here love their country. They are highly skilled. They had good jobs and professions. Being here does not mean they want to stay here forever. People cannot go back to a country where their lives are being threatened. When it is safe for them to go back to Zimbabwe, many of them will do so voluntarily."
Ambrose Musiyiwa
e-mail: amusiyiwa@yahoo.com
Homepage: http://ambrosemusiyiwa.blogspot.com/
You stupid people
13.09.2007 06:28
The MDC or so called Movement for Democratic Change, is unable to win a democratic election BECAUSE the bulk of zimbabweans understand it is serving the interesting of the white power elite. The leader, Tsvangirai has said:
'The Movement for Democratic Change leader told 20,000 supprters at a rally on Saturday that if Mr Mugabe did not want to step down before the next elections scheduled for 2002 "we will remove you violently".
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/africa/952796.stm
Here the BBC has reported the truth. Do you know WHO the MDC is allied with? Freeodm House:
'Suspended MDC leader Mr Morgan Tsvangirai and his eight-member team were deported from Zambia after they allegedly held a secret meeting with officials from a US-funded organisation called Freedom House headed by former CIA and FBI agents, it has emerged.
It has also emerged that the US embassy in Harare arranged the meeting, with the American team raising suspicion that the meeting could have been organised to plot ways of causing an upheaval in Zimbabwe.
\etc
http://www.doublestandards.org/mail3.html
Freedom House is linked to the NED, the very same group that has funded opposition groups in places like Venezuela and Cuba..
SO DONT BE FOOLED.
If youn want to hear the other side of the story, youd do well to surf this site:
http://www.raceandhistory.com/Zimbabwe/
There you can learn that most people of Ghana support Mugabe, and unlike you lot, know all about the MDC:
http://raceandhistory.com/selfnews/viewnews.cgi?newsid1183637233,97764,.shtml
Ghana no go area for the MDC
http://raceandhistory.com/selfnews/viewnews.cgi?newsid1183636573,4423,.shtml
brian
Maud Lennard Kadango still in Yarl's Wood
21.09.2007 23:13
Maud also informs me that the hunger strike, which started on September 10, 2007 is continuing. She reports that the hunger striker is taking a toll on Faina Manuel Pondesi who now is not feeling well and whose health is deteriorating.
Faina says she will stay on hunger strike until she is either released or until she dies in detention.
Ambrose Musiyiwa
e-mail: amusiyiwa@yahoo.com
Homepage: http://ambrosemusiyiwa.blogspot.com/