19. September 2012 · Kommentare deaktiviert für Griechenland: Neue Abschiebeknäste auf Lesbos, Samos, Chios und Rhodos in Planung · Kategorien: Griechenland · Tags:

http://infomobile.w2eu.net/2012/09/18/four-detention-centres-decided-for-lesvos-samos-chios-and-rhodos/

Four new detention centres for Lesvos, Samos, Chios and Rhodos planned

Published on September 18, 2012 in Uncategorized.

Authorities are planning to set up four new reception centers for immigrants on islands of the Aegean (Chios, Lesvos, Samos and Rhodos) to cope with the rising influx of migrants and refugees into Greece by sea that has been prompted by more effective policing along the Turkish land border. The Greek police announced that in the period between August 1st and September 17, 2012, 44 arrivals of refugee boats were registered with a total of 831 refugees being arrested on the Aegean islands. Weiterlesen »

29. August 2012 · Kommentare deaktiviert für UN Bericht zu (Abschiebe-)Haft in Tunesien · Kategorien: Tunesien · Tags: ,

UN Special Rapporteur on the human rights of migrants concludes first country visit in his regional study on the human rights of migrants at the borders of the European Union: Visit to Tunisia

http://www.ohchr.org/FR/NewsEvents/Pages/DisplayNews.aspx?NewsID=12231&LangID=E

Auszüge:

„Firstly, I am concerned that irregular border crossing remains a criminal offence in Tunisia (franchissement illégal de la frontière). This contravenes fundamental principles of human rights including the right to leave ones country (Art. 12, ICCPR). Whilst the Tunisian authorities insist that this is not regularly applied against Tunisians, I learned of cases where it was in fact used, including against foreigners entering Tunisia irregularly, and who were subsequently imprisoned for the alleged offence. I also met with an unaccompanied minor who had been charged with crossing the border into Tunisia illegally. He was sentenced to 9 days prison, which he served in a juvenile facility, and was thereafter transferred to a detention center awaiting deportation. […]

Weiterlesen »

23. August 2012 · Kommentare deaktiviert für Abschiebelager in Griechenland von EU finanziert · Kategorien: Griechenland · Tags: , ,
Matthias Monroy, telepolis 23.08.2012:

„Im Vorgehen von griechischen Polizisten und Neonazis gegen unerwünschte Migranten macht sich die EU zum Komplizen. Auch in Bulgarien wird die Grenzüberwachung aufgerüstet.

Die Europäische Union unterstützt Griechenland in zahlreichen Maßnahmen gegen unerwünschte Migration mit hohen finanziellen Zuwendungen. Dies geht aus einer Antwort der EU-Innenkommissarin Malmström hervor. Demnach fließen allein dieses Jahr Mittel in Höhe von rund 90 Millionen Euro in die Abwehr von Migration. Vor der Gewährung zusätzlicher Hilfen wird eine Mitteilung der Regierung in Athen abgewartet. Auch Bulgarien soll seine Außengrenzen zur Türkei besser überwachen.“

Vollständiger Text:

http://www.heise.de/tp/artikel/37/37480/1.html

22. August 2012 · Kommentare deaktiviert für Revolte im Abschiebeknast Pozzallo (Sizilien) · Kategorien: Italien, Tunesien · Tags: , ,

14 Tunesier, die im „Aufnahmezentrum“ Pozzallo (Sizilien, Provinz Ragusa) auf das Dach gestiegen sind und fliehen wollten, sind verhaftet worden. Alle waren zwischen dem 16. und 18.08.2012 in Lampedusa angelandet. Da sie nicht abgeschoben werden wollten, haben sie die Unterkunft verwüstet und sind auf das Dach gestiegen. Als die Polizei anrückte, haben sie Gegenstände vom Dach geworfen.

http://palermo.repubblica.it/cronaca/2012/08/21/news/ragusa_14_arresti_nel_centro_accoglienza_arrestati_14_tunisin-41252610/?ref=search

08. August 2012 · Kommentare deaktiviert für Griechenland: Austerität und Rassismus – Chronologie · Kategorien: Griechenland · Tags: , ,

The connection between the attacks on immigrants and the social/economic situation in Greece:

  • The first wave of attacks against immigrants was a counter-insurgency response to the December ’08 riots in the spring of ’09 (in fact, before the NoBorder camp on Lesvos). Then there was talk of FRONTEX, of building the wall in Evros and new detention centres across the land.
  • There was a small interval during the first months of the PASOK government (with the voting of the „citizenship bill“, and Vougias‘ decision to shut down Pagani). The 300 immigrant workers‘ 44-day hunger strike in January 2011 pushed back the tide for a while.
  • The recession continued. Ever since the introduction of the IMF structural adjustments (i.e. the politics of destruction), the scapegoating of immigrants has been elevated to a central governing technique of the State.
  • In March 2012, while a non-elected coalition government was in power (comprising of the collapsing PASOK, right and far-right wing ministers, as well as a banker prime minister), two of its most prominent (PASOK) ministers, that of Health and that of Public Order, set the tone for a full-scale onslaught against immigrants, legitimizing and encouraging a populist-fascist movement …

The problem is not only that 7% of the (valid) votes in May and June 2012 went to the neo-nazi party, but that the official rhetoric of the government and the mass media is openly fascist …

and also, that half of the police vote for the neo-nazi party …. (so one does not have to wonder whether the immigrants are being treated badly by the police here – or whether fascists ever get arrested by the police, since they are largely the same people …)

There is no doubt that the rise of fascist populism and immigrant scapegoating is directly connected to the IMF structural adjustment plans

(clandestina)

06. August 2012 · Kommentare deaktiviert für Aufruf zur Demonstration gegen Abschiebeknäste in Büren · Kategorien: Deutschland · Tags:

Der Aufruf kann gerne noch von Initiativen und Einzelpersonen unterzeichnet werden. Alle Infos siehe www.schlussdamit.blogsport.de

Deutsch Englisch / English Französisch / Français Kurdisch: Kurmandschi / Kurdî Persisch (Farsi) / فارسی / Fārsī Portugiesisch / Português Spanisch / Español = Kastilisch / Castellano

Weiterlesen »

06. August 2012 · Kommentare deaktiviert für Griechenland: Massenverhaftungen für die Troika · Kategorien: Griechenland · Tags: ,

Laut „occupied london“ sind in den vergangenen Tagen in Athen und Evros Tausende von Flüchtlinge und Migrant_innen, mit und ohne Papiere, verhaftet worden. Die griechische Regierung stellt die Massenverhaftungen in den Zusammenhang, dass die Troika (IWF, EU-Kommissioin; EZB) jetzt wieder in Athen auftaucht.

http://infomobile.w2eu.net/

http://blog.occupiedlondon.org/2012/08/05/6400-migrants-detained-by-police-in-largest-ever-pogrom-by-police-in-the-centre-of-athens/

http://www.20minutes.fr/ledirect/981779/grece-plus-1000-personnes-arretees-chasse-sans-papiers-athenes
http://tempsreel.nouvelobs.com/monde/20120804.AFP4845/grece-nouveau-coup-de-balai-de-la-police-contre-les-sans-papiers-a-athenes.html

http://www.dw.de/dw/article/0,,16146141,00.html

06. August 2012 · Kommentare deaktiviert für Video aus italienischem Abschiebeknast Trapani Milo · Kategorien: Italien, Tunesien · Tags: , ,

Es ist einer der modernsten Abschiebeknäste Europas: Milo, bei Trapani (Sizilien), direkt neben der Autobahn. Ungefähr 200 Tunesier sind hier interniert, zum Teil leben sie bereits seit über 20 Jahren in Italien.

Das Video haben Internierte mit eigenem Handy gemacht. Gezeigt wird Revolte und Niederschlagung.

Das Video ist vom Mai/Juni, gemacht vom Journalisten Alessio Genovese aus Trapani und Raffaella Cosentino, Journalistin aus Rom, die für den Redattore Sociale arbeitet und aktiv in der Kampagen „LasciateCIEntrare“ mitmacht („Lasst uns rein in die Abschiebungshaft).
Genovese war im Frühsommer 2 mal in Milo drin, Raffaella weiß ich nicht mehr, ob sie reinkam.

Alles von Flüchtlingen gefilmt bis  auf einige wenige Szenen, die Alessio heimlich gefilmt hat, als er drinnen war.
Tenor: Fluchtversuche aufgrund der langen Haftzeiten, Haftbedingungen miserabel (auf dem Boden essen, keine Möbel, jeden Tag Razzien der Zellen (daher das Chaos auf den Bildern, die Polizisten waren gerade durch), Misshandlungen. Sie werden mit Wasserwerfern, deren Schläuche immer an das Wassernetz angeschlossen sind, von den 5 m hohen Mauern wieder runtergeholt bei Fluchtversuchen, auch mit Tränengas.
Der eine befragte Polisist sagt „wir wollen euch nicht wehtun, aber wenn ihr mir mit 20 Leuten entgegenkommt müssen wir uns wehren“.
Die Wasserschläuche dienen angeblich der Brandvermeidung, aber, so Cosentino, haben wir ja gesehen wofür sie sind. Bei den Handys werden  normalerweise die Kamerafunktionen kaputt gemacht, damit genau solche Bilder nicht rausgehen. Es gibt viele Selbstverletzungen, aber eben auch Misshandlungen, so der eine Tunesier, der aus dem Krnakenhaus kommend geschlagen wird (am Kopf).
Es sitzen viele ein, Familienväter, Leute, die schon sehr lange in Italien leben, so erzählt einer, er sei schon seit 26 Jahren hier. Und sie kommen aus anderen Landesteilen nach Trapani, oftmals unschuldig daran, dass der Aufenthalt noch nicht verlängert wurde (lange Wartezeiten bei den Behörden), einer erzählt, er sei Deserteur, man könne ihn doch nicht abschieben.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hln4koJqQLs&feature=share

30. Juli 2012 · Kommentare deaktiviert für b4p Bericht zu Abschiebeknästen in Italien · Kategorien: Italien · Tags:

Einsperren, um abzuschrecken
In Italien sitzen Tausende aufgegriffene Flüchtlinge in Internierungslagern fest

Von Matthias Heintze

Flüchtlinge, die es über das Mittelmeer nach Italien schaffen, sind noch lange nicht in Sicherheit. Werden sie entdeckt, landen sie in Internierungslagern wie dem von Milo auf Sizilien.

ND, 27.07.2012, vollständiger Artikel:

08eu-27072012-b

 

19. Juli 2012 · Kommentare deaktiviert für Malta: HRW berichtet über Abschiebeknäste · Kategorien: Malta · Tags: ,

1.500 Boat-people jährlich in maltesischen Abschiebeknästen – Verletzung des internationalen Rechts

HRW Report on Malta’s Migrant Detention Policy: “Boat Ride to Detention”

Human Rights Watch has issued a report, “Boat Ride to Detention – Adult and Child Migrants in Malta”, documenting the treatment of migrants and asylum seekers arriving by boat in Malta and concluding that the mandatory detention policy violates international law.

Excerpts:

Summary – Malta routinely detains an average of 1,500 people per year, including children, who arrive in the country by boat without permission, or ‘irregularly.’ These are migrants and asylum seekers, typically from Somalia, Eritrea, and other sub-Saharan African countries, who travel to Europe fleeing persecution or in search of a better life. Many have fled violence and conflict, and almost all have made an arduous journey, taking months to cross the Sahara and travel north through Libya. The last stage of that journey is a perilous, multiday trip across the Mediterranean, typically in overcrowded vessels that are not seaworthy, and without enough food, water, or fuel, before they reach Maltese shores or are intercepted at sea by the Armed Forces of Malta.
Boat migrants arriving in Malta are taken straight to detention if they lack an entry visa (as they virtually all do). This report addresses their arbitrary, indiscriminate, and unfair detention. The report focuses on those who arrive in Malta by boat, as migrants who arrive in Malta by air for the most part are not detained, even if they enter under false pretenses or subsequently claim asylum. Asylum seekers who arrive by boat are detained for up to 12 months, and migrants who do not apply for asylum, or whose asylum claims are rejected, can be detained for up to 18 months. Under international law migrants who do not have permission to enter or stay in a country may be subject to detention, in certain circumstances, and also may be subject to safeguards. However in Malta, the detention policy operates in an automated, indiscriminate, and blanket manner in violation of international law.
In the course of this virtually automated detention policy, Malta routinely detains unaccompanied migrant children whose age is in question. ‘Unaccompanied children’ are migrants under the age of 18 (typically between 14 and 17) who travel without parents or caregivers. Migrants who claim to be unaccompanied children go through an age determination procedure, which relies on interviews and occasional medical testing to establish age. In 2007 and 2008, for example, around 400 children each year arrived in Malta claiming to be unaccompanied.1 While they register for and undergo the age determination procedure, Malta keeps these children in detention. [***]
While Malta justifies its prolonged detention of migrants as a legitimate response to irregular entry, the practice amounts to arbitrary detention prohibited by international law. Prolonged administrative custody, without the possibility of meaningful review, violates the prohibition on arbitrary detention in article 9 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, and the European Court of Human Rights has found Malta’s detention policy to violate the European Convention’s provisions on the right to liberty. Children enjoy particular protection under the law: in principle, migrant children should not be detained, and where they are detained it must be as a last resort for the shortest appropriate period of time. [***]
Flawed Maltese and European Migration Policies
Malta’s detention policy is part of flawed approaches to migration, both by Malta itself and by the European Union (EU). The central Mediterranean migration route—typically from Libya to Malta or Italy—is a major entrance point to the EU. Since 2002, approximately 15,000 migrants have reached Malta by this route, some intentionally, many by mistake as they stumble across the small island country while hoping to reach Italy. While the number of migrants arriving in Malta is low in absolute terms, Malta now has the highest number of asylum seekers relative to the national population of any country in the industrialized world. Malta, a country of only 400,000 people, received 20.1 asylum seekers per 1,000 inhabitants in the years 2007-2011, whereas France, the EU member state receiving the largest number of asylum seekers in absolute terms in 2011, received about 3 per 1,000.
Although migrants have been traveling this migration route—in higher or lower numbers— for some ten years, neither Malta nor the EU has developed a sound policy that either respects migrants’ human rights or that addresses the high burden placed on Malta. EU asylum rules mean that member states at EU borders sometimes are forced to assume responsibility for a vastly disproportionate share of migrants and asylum seekers. The Dublin II regulation, promulgated in 2003, mandates that an individual’s asylum application must be processed in the country where the individual first entered the EU. This places an unfair burden on Malta, which must process these asylum applications in-country and which is obliged to accept the return of any asylum seekers whose first port of entry in the EU was Malta.
The EU has taken some steps towards mitigating this burden, for instance by relocating recognized refugees from Malta to other EU states and providing limited financial support. But these steps have been insufficient to assist Malta in meeting migrants’ needs. The case of Malta, like that of Greece, shows the need to revise the Dublin II regulation to permit greater burden sharing in processing and hosting asylum seekers, rather than insisting on the country of first arrival as the primary factor in assessing member state responsibility.
Malta’s arbitrary detention policy, in addition to violating international standards, does not work to deter migrants from landing on its shores. Migrants may not intend to travel to Malta, and indeed the boats in which they travel lack navigational equipment that would enable them to choose their destination. Some migrants Human Rights Watch spoke with said they did not even know that Malta existed as a country before they landed there.
Though Malta’s burden is disproportionately large, detention is neither a legal nor a sound response to boat migration in the central Mediterranean. Both Malta and the EU should enact new policies to respond to their legal obligations to uphold migrants’ rights.
  • Malta should allow detention of migrants only in exceptional circumstances, with individualized determinations, and access to procedures to challenge detention.
  • Malta should treat those who claim to be children as such pending the outcome of age determination proceedings, and release all those with pending claims from detention.
  • The EU should reform the Dublin system by having the Dublin regulation take into account equitable burden-sharing among member countries.
[***]
IV. Conclusion
[***] Malta must revise its migrant detention policies for adult and child migrants alike, and end the continued mental stress imposed on migrants kept in prolonged detention. Maltese laws should allow detention of migrants only in exceptional circumstances, with individualized determinations, and access to procedures to challenge detention.”