|
Back to Index
Statement
on the resumption of forced removals to Zimbabwe
Prof
Terence Ranger, President of the Britain-Zimbabwe Society
November 18, 2004
The Government
announced on November 16 that it was lifting the suspension on returns
to Zimbabwe. Its spokesman said that 'we suspended temporarily all
enforced returns to Zimbabwe in 2002 for the best of motives but
it has been exploited'. Zimbabweans were arriving on false documents
and with manifestly weak claims, confident in the knowledge that
they would be allowed to stay in Britain even if their asylum claims
were disallowed. As supporting evidence the Home Office asserted
that between January and November 2004 1,825 of the 2,025 Zimbabweans
who applied for asylum were refused it.
There are several
grave flaws in this official position. However good the motives
of the initial suspension, it was rapidly followed up by the introduction
of a visa regime. No Zimbabwean could travel to Britain without
a visa; no-one could apply at the British High Commission (now Embassy)
for a visa on the grounds that they wished to claim asylum. Even
the most genuine of asylum seekers, therefore, had either to pretend
some other reason for wishing to visit Britain or else to obtain
false South African or Malawian passports - both taken as adequate
reasons for refusing their applications.
Moreover, the
very high numbers of refusals in the last eleven months contrast
strikingly with statistics for the previous period subsequent to
the stay on removals when there was an unusually high proportion
- over 40% - of successful appeals by Zimbabwean asylum seekers.
The change during this year reflects not so much the increased number
of 'bogus' claimants as the imposition of a new regime. Fast track
assessments allow no time for proper investigation or representation.
The drastic cut-back on legal aid means that many fewer expert reports
are commissioned. Many of the best asylum legal practitioners have
withdrawn because of the manifest impossibility of adequately representing
their clients. Anyone who has written expert reports knows how arbitrary
initial Home Office refusals can be. They are now unlikely to be
challenged.
The new policy
makes no pretence that Zimbabwe has become a safer place since 2002.
The Government says that there has been no change 'in our opposition
to human rights abuses in Zimbabwe' and that it will work to 'restore
democracy so that all Zimbabweans can in time return safely to help
build a prosperous and stable Zimbabwe'. In the meantime, however,
it proposes to send many Zimbabweans back to an unstable Zimbabwe
in a state of economic collapse and with continuing human rights
abuses. What has changed since 2002 is not Zimbabwe but the British
political climate. In 2002 Zimbabwe was much in the news because
of the take-over of white-owned land. Even the Conservative Party
supported the suspension of removals. Now Zimbabwe has dropped out
of the news headlines. Few British politicians care much any longer
about what happens to black Zimbabweans.
But those of
who do care wish to register a strong protest against the resumption
of removals and to call for the re-instatement of just processes
of assessment of asylum claims.
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
TOP
|