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ZIMBABWE:
Govt slams claim that rejected UK asylum seekers are at risk at home
IRIN
News
October 14, 2005
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=49568
JOHANNESBURG - The
Zimbabwe government on Friday condemned a ruling by a British tribunal
accepting that failed asylum seekers face persecution at home.
Justice minister Patrick Chinamasa said the ruling by Britain's Asylum
and Immigration Tribunal in a test case was as fraudulent as the unnamed
failed asylum seeker's claim that he would be at risk if he were deported.
"This was a disastrous public relations attempt - its only purpose was
to dirty Zimbabwe's name. Anyone who really comes from Zimbabwe knows
that the so-called possibility of persecution, on which the judgment was
based, does not exist," Chinamasa told IRIN.
"The British government was intent on using the hearing as a way of sending
out more invitations to future false asylum claimants in Zimbabwe, so
that it can revive and uphold its tired assertion that the government
here is starving, killing or persecuting its own people for political
ends," Chinamasa claimed.
The British government, which has come under domestic attack for lifting
its ban on deportations to Zimbabwe, argued that asylum cases should be
decided on their individual merit.
The BBC quoted Britain's immigration minister, Tony McNulty, as saying
the tribunal's decision threw the government's asylum policy into question,
and "leaves the entire system open to abuse".
Chinamasa insisted that hundreds of failed asylum seekers had been returned
from Britain in recent years, and none had been arrested or persecuted.
A senior official of Zimbabwe Lawyers for Human Rights told IRIN that
he was not aware of examples of the detention of returnees from Britain.
"In a few cases people were questioned by the security services on arrival
at the airport - I am not aware of anyone who was detained or brought
before the courts for attempting to seek asylum," said the official, who
declined to be named.
He said most of the people who claimed political asylum were highly educated
economic refugees with no political links. He also noted that violence
against members of the opposition had fallen since presidential elections
in 2003.
"The political crisis has been well-documented, but it would be unfair
and untrue of all those who leave the country to claim political asylum
on the grounds of persecution," the human rights lawyer commented.
"There are hundreds of Zimbabwean activists inside the country who continue
to demonstrate against the government and get arrested by the police.
Nothing beyond the ordinary has happened to them and they are still here,"
he added.
International human rights groups have been sharply critical of the government's
track record, pointing to the use of the security forces to curb political
dissent and the introduction of strict laws limiting freedom of assembly,
association, and independence of the media.
A two-year-old ban on deportations from Britain was lifted last November.
Zimbabwean asylum seekers have been vocal on the policy change, and staged
hunger strikes and public protests at immigration centres in the UK earlier
this year.
Britain is now home to an estimated 12,000 Zimbabwean asylum seekers.
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