In many countries, immigration detention has become an integral part of the the immigration system. It is certainly one of the most brutal and dehumanising aspects of this racist system whereby innocent and vulnerable people are interned in prison for political ends. In 25 EU member states alone, there are 174 such prisons, while more have been built in neighbouring countries as part of externalising the borders of Fortress Europe.
In the UK, there are 10 so-called Immigration Reception Centres, with a total capacity of 2,506 places, but the government is aiming for a total of 4,000 places by building new detention centres. Seven of these are run by private companies contracted by the Home Office, while three are run by the Prison Service. In addition, there are many so-called Short-term Holding Facilities at many ports and airports throughout the country as well as at a number of Immigration Reporting Centres.
On the other hand, resistance, both inside and outside these prisons, has been getting stronger and stronger. Hunger strikes, riots and pickets have become a common occurrence. But obviously not enough is being done as thousands of people continue to suffer in their cells.
The UK No Borders network is calling on all concerned individuals and groups all over the world to join us in an international coordinated day of action against immigration prisons everywhere on 22 September, 2007. While we realise that resistance is continuous and not confined to 'days of action', we call upon refugees and migrants and their supporters throughout the world to organise their own actions on this day, both inside and outside immigration prisons, in a global united cry:
NO TO IMMIGRATION PRISONS; NO TO RACIST BORDER REGIMES!
The Day of Action will be during the first No Border Camp in the UK, to be held between 19 and 24 September near Gatwick Airport (see www.noborders.org.uk). The Camp was prompted by government plans to build a new immigration prison at Gatwick, designed to hold 426 migrant prisoners. Over the last 9 years, the worldwide No Border network has organised many similar camps, including those in Tijuana (Mexico), Genova (Italy), Woomera (Australia), Frankfurt (Germany) and recently Transcarpathia (Ukraine). Each camp often focuses on a specific issue but is ultimately campaigning against borders and for the freedom of movement for all people.
This call also follows many years of global, decentralised, coordinated campaigning, which saw two European Days of Action on 31 January, 2004, and 2 April, 2005, and an International Day of Migration-Related Actions on 7 October, 2006.
Please spread this call as widely as possible. If you want to add your name to the list of signatories, please email noborders-uk@riseup.net.
No Borders UK
Email: noborders-uk@riseup.net
Website: http://www.noborders.org.uk
Comments
Hide the following 7 comments
TCAR will be supporting the day of action
04.08.2007 23:45
Together we are stronger! Together we will win!
TCAR member
e-mail: tynesidecarn@yahoo.com
so why the fuck is TCAR not coming down to Tinsley House then ???
05.08.2007 07:10
Is there a specific reason why you are now mobilising to Newcastle instead of doing a simple
trip on the bus??
wondering
against SOME prisons?
05.08.2007 10:24
While you continue to promote the “afterwards” strategy of reforms to end border controls first, and end criminalisation, racism and every other oppression later, you promote the status quo.
ACAB
In support
05.08.2007 16:01
Newcastle to Gatwick is a long way. Lot's of campaigns prefer local support actions rather than national (ie everyone travel to London twice a week) actions. It helps save the environment, starve capitalism and it includes people who otherwise couldn't participate. When anti-war demos have been called in London, simultaneous anti-war demos have been held in Edinburgh or Glasgow or often both, which to me makes sense. Think globally, act locally.
ACAB,
If you support ending all prisons then it makes sense to support any limited campaign against certain types of prison and to encourage the wider struggle rather than berate those who are doing something. Rome wasn't burned in a day you know ;-)
Danny
sept 22nd and the new detention centre
06.08.2007 08:03
but for uk, this specific day was thought as a protest against the plans to build Britains's newest immigration prison. (the work on the building site started 2 weeks ago).
anybody
For local, national and international action?
06.08.2007 09:36
Which bit of this says the only choices are Gatwick or staying at home? Doesn't whoever wrote the irate comment WANT solidarity?
TCAR has a wide membership in Newcastle including lots of people (mainlyasylum seekers) who have no money and sometimes can't even travel out of the city on free transport. What is the the problem with, instead of insisting everyone get on the bus, not just to London but even further south, there is a local action in support?
N
Numbers hide the real scale of the problem
23.09.2007 21:35
The numbers 2600 places and 4000 places don't mean much, and don't convey the scale of the problem. If we look at how detention centres are used and, for the sake of argument, assume that asylum seekers and those classed as illegal and due for deportation or likely to abscond, are detained on average for 2 weeks (the average is likely to be longer), then that means that around 62,500 separate detentions take place in the course of a year with 2600 places. Some people are detained more than once, and each time they are detained will count as a separate detention. If capacity increases from 2600 to 4000, then the annual number of detentions can go closer to 100,000. The scale of the capacity is mind-boggling; with declining asylum numbers, who is all this space going to be used for?! The mind boggles.
Helen Anderson