Resistance in the UK's Detention Centres in the Last Decade
Time: 7 pm, Tuesday 24 June 2008
Venue: T&G, Transport House, 128 Theobald's Road, London WC1X 8TN
The UK government has also tried several times to prosecute those involved in large-scale riots. This has rarely resulted in convictions and has more often led to public humiliation for the government and the private detention contractors. The government is persisting in its plans to rebuild ruined wings and build completely new centres at
Brook House (opening 2009), Yarl's Wood (opening 2010) and Bicester (opening 2012). These will provide more profit-making opportunities for the building contractors and private detention companies but in the end are likely to face the same level of protest.
Protests in detention centres are often ignored by the mainstream media and also by political activists. London No Borders invites you to an info night to discuss why this is the case and to raise awareness of detention centre protests as one of the front lines of
current political resistance. The primary aim is not to plan future actions but to discuss what has happened already and why it has had such a low profile. We particularly welcome ex-detainees who witnessed or participated in detention centre protests and ex-prisoners who could relate this issue to prisoners' struggles.
No Borders calls for the closure of all detention centres and an end to deportations.
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Programme for Radical History Meeting
21.06.2008 15:51
Purpose of meeting:
- to raise awareness of detention centre protest as a political movement
- to support current protest by setting it within a historical tradition
Scope of meeting:
- detainee activism in detention
- NOT conditions of detention or surrounding issues about the asylum system, destitution, anti-deportation campaigns etc.
- Outline of chronology and main types of resistance and summary of main events.
2. Speakers from various detention centre protests, including the 2005 Yarl’s Wood mass hungerstrike and the 2006 Harmondsworth uprising.
- to talk about the events in which they were involved
- to address some of the following questions if they want to
* What were the triggers for the protests?
* What were the demands? Why were those demands chosen?
* Why did they choose that type of protest? What tactics did the protesters use in the course of their protests?
* How did the protesters organise amongst themselves?
* How did the protesters manage divide and rule tactics by the authorities?
* What outside support did they get? How helpful was it? What kind of support were they hoping to get?
* Outcomes – impact of the protests on conditions and treatment; gains and losses; repression by the authorities
* How did the protests change the way the protesters viewed themselves and their situation?
* Why have the protests had such a low profile relative both to the level of protest and to the profile given by activists to other forms of resistance? What is the relationship between detainee activism and what is called the ‘social movement’? Issues of racism etc.
3.Open discussion
4.Groups to give brief outline of current activities
5.Proposal for working group to create written record of history of detention centre resistance
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