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Failed
Zimbabwe asylum seekers face deportation from Britain
Tendai Maphosa, Voice of America (VOA)
March 17, 2008
http://voanews.com/english/2008-03-17-voa55.cfm
British immigration authorities
have informed hundreds of failed Zimbabwean asylum seekers that
they are to be deported back to Zimbabwe. Tendai Maphosa has the
details in this report from London.
The British Home Office
has sent letters to about 500 Zimbabwean asylum seekers telling
them they had exhausted their rights of appeal and saying they should
make plans to return home. The letters said immigration authorities
expect to enforce deportations to Zimbabwe shortly where, the letter
said, the deportees face no general risk of persecution.
Sarah Harland of the
Zimbabwe Association, a non-governmental organization that assists
Zimbabwean asylum seekers, expressed dismay at the government's
action.
"It appears to be
an intimidatory measure, it seems to be intended to frighten people
into going back of their own [voluntarily], but the curious thing
about it is that the legal process is still ongoing and the Home
Office had said they would not enforce the return of failed asylum
seekers until the [court] case was finished," said Harland.
Late last year, Harland
said, the Refugee Legal Centre applied to the Court of Appeal asking
to overturn an earlier ruling by the Asylum and Immigration Tribunal,
which had decided in favor of deportation in the case of one specific
asylum seeker. That appeal is still ongoing.
Harland also expressed
concern over what she described as a seemingly haphazard way of
informing people of the government's intentions.
"From the information
that we have got so far, at least two of the people have been sent
the letters have got cases that are ongoing and they fit into the
categories of people recognized to be at risk," she said. "Another
of the people who got a letter contacted their own lawyer; that
lawyer contacted the Home Office and was told by the case worker
that the letter had been sent out by mistake.
Harland said that during
the last deportations to Zimbabwe from November 2004 to July 2005,
a significant proportion of those forcibly returned reported that
they had suffered persecution, mistreatment or imprisonment.
The Home Office did not
respond to VOA requests for a statement.
The British government
has been a vocal critic of Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe and
his government and has repeatedly spoken out against human rights
abuses there.
Prime Minister Gordon
Brown refused to attend the European Union/African Union Summit
in Lisbon last year because Mr. Mugabe was to be there.
Human rights activists
have accused the British government of inconsistency in criticizing
the Zimbabwe government and yet being willing to send asylum seekers
back home to where many say they face persecution.
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