|
Back to Index
Desperate
tale of a Zimbabwe hunger striker recovering in a UK hospital
Violet Gonda, SW Radio Africa
December 09, 2005
Two Zimbabwean
asylum seekers who have been on hunger strike for 33 days were moved
from Yarls Wood Detention Centre to Bedford hospital in the U.K.
They are being gradually reintroduced to food after becoming dangerously
ill.
Amanda Sibiya
and another woman who prefers to be called Thando have been on hunger
strike to protest against their forced deportations from the United
Kingdom.
A human rights
worker for the Zimbabwe Central London Forum, Anna Meryt, said as
a result of political pressure, the two were moved from Yarls Wood
to a hospital when their condition deteriorated. Both were abused
by men while living in exile in South Africa.
Meryt told SW
RADIO AFRICA her group is hoping to have them out on bail soon,
but appealed for accommodation for Amanda when she comes out of
hospital. She is aged 19 and suffered severe abuse from age 15.
She also needs to be in a supportive and all female environment
for a while.
It’s been a
very hard few years for Amanda Sibiya. Her story is a sad one, and
it is feared a number of Zimbabwean refugees in South Africa face
similar situations. Amanda’s father was allegedly murdered by war
veterans in Zimbabwe sometime after the 2002 presidential elections.
She was 15 at the time.
Her mother,
in fear for her life, took her and her sister aged 22 across the
border and into South Africa.
They had no
money and no papers but managed to make contact with a man in South
Africa who promised to help. In a detailed report by Meryt, this
man used the children as prostitutes in order to feed the family.
Meryt’s report claims he came 2-3 times a week and used the daughters
for sex, often bringing 2 or 3 friends with him. This man supported
the mother and daughters financially and allowed them to stay in
his flat.
In Dec 2003,
a desperate Amanda tried to escape from the flat, but unfortunately,
the man caught her at a railway station. She was injured but returned
to the flat with on crutches, and the cycle of abuse resumed. Then
in September 2005, Amanda discovered she was pregnant. Her mother
paid for an abortion several months later. Three days later her
mother, she obtained a South African passport and came to the UK
where she stayed with well-wishers.
Meanwhile her
sister was diagnosed with HIV and taken to a hospital in South Africa.
Her mother was reported to the police by the man and sent back to
Zimbabwe. She has not been heard from since and Amanda fears that
she may be dead. Many people 'disappear' en route back to Zimbabwe
on these trucks. Her sister developed mental health problems. Amanda
last spoke to her in June 2005 and she did not recognise her.
In April 2005,
immigration officials found Amanda and took her to Oakington DC
where another Zimbabwe woman advised her to claim asylum. Several
months ago the Home Office attempted to remove her, but she made
such a fuss on the plane that the captain ordered her removal because
the crying and fuss was upsetting the passengers. She was put back
in detention.
Anna Meryt said
the story is a shocking tale of child abuse by predatory abusers
in South Africa. It is unfortunately not uncommon that refugee young
girls and women who are vulnerable can become the prey for such
men. Amanda suffers from depression and other mental problems as
a result of what happened to her. She is frightened of men and the
staff at Yarl’s Wood are largely male. She tells Meryt that many
of them will walk into her room without knocking and don't care
if they find her naked.
In November
a UK immigration tribunal disallowed Zimbabwe deportations but it
is very difficult to reverse this decision on Zimbabweans who come
into the country with other passports, like Malawain or South African.
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
|