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No place for children petition

John O | 25.09.2008 14:12 | Migration | Social Struggles | Workers' Movements

The 'No Place for Children' campaign is calling for an end to the UK government's senseless and brutal policy of sending 2,000 children a year to immigration detention centres. Children in detention centres do not have access to adequate healthcare and education, and they can be held for an unlimited period of time. The psychological and physical effects are often devastating.



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No place for children petition
 http://www.newstatesman.com/2008/09/children-petition

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Many thanks
Alice O'Keeffe
Arts editor
New Statesman

Articles on this issue, testimonies from detainees and other information on the No Place for Children campaign can be found here:  http://www.newstatesman.com/subjects/no-place-for-children

The New Statesman 'No Place for Children' campaign calls on the government to end the detention of children for immigration reasons

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There has been much hype and much misunderstanding in the media over the last week on the Government's announcement that the UK will be come a full signatory to the 'UN Convention on the Rights of the Child (UNCRC)'. It will not end the detention of children in the UK asylum estate, read on . . .



One step forward . . .

Alice O'Keeffe, New Statesman, Published 25 September 2008
 http://www.newstatesman.com/uk-politics/2008/09/children-rights-immigration

The government has announced a new commitment to equal rights for asylum-seeking children. Now they must put it into practice

The government has taken an important step towards a more humane immigration system for children. At a meeting with the UN's Committee on the Rights of the Child on 23 September, it announced that it would sign the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child (UNCRC) in full. For the past 17 years, the UK has retained an immigration "reservation" to the UNCRC. In other words, it has said that refugee and asylum-seeking children who live in Britain do not have the same rights as those with British citizen ship. During that time it remained unmoved as hum an-rights organisations - and the UN itself - criticised the hypocrisy inherent in the reservation. As one campaigner has said: it "contravenes the whole spirit of a treaty that sets out universal children's rights".

The decision to drop the reservation signals a significant moral victory for all those who have worked to expose the brutal treatment of children in the UK immigration system. It establishes the principle that the best interests of children are more important than government deportation targets. And, although the UNCRC is not enforceable in UK courts, it will add force to arguments put forward by detained children's legal representatives. It also increases pressure on the government to amend legislation such as the 2004 Children Act to include measures to cover refugee and asylum-seeking children.

There is little doubt, however, that this is primarily symbolic. It helped to show goodwill in the UN committee meeting, in the face of stinging criticism of UK immigration practices from the children's commissioners and other human-rights organisations.

It does nothing to change the reality for the thousands of children who pass through the UK's immigration detention centres every year. Indeed, far from decreasing the number of detained children and families, the government recently announced plans to increase the capacity of the detention estate - including plans to double the size of Yarl's Wood, where children and families are currently held.

Only when the government brings in practical measures aimed at changing the culture and practices of the Home Office and the UK Border Agency, which currently show such cruel disregard for child welfare, will it have realised its commitment to uphold the rights of all children. As Lisa Nandy, asylum adviser at the Children's Society, says: "Having sent a clear message that these children matter as much as any other, the government must now go further and end its policy of detaining children and their parents."

End of Bulletin:

Source for this Message:
New Statesman

John O
- e-mail: JohnO@ncadc.org.uk
- Homepage: http://www.ncadc.org.uk