Showing posts with label Children Rights. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Children Rights. Show all posts

Wednesday, 17 June 2009

Congo Children Battle Deportation

Sveriges Radio International - English -- Engelska

Three abandoned brothers from war-torn Congo Kinshasa who fled to Sweden two years ago are fighting to stay here after being told by the Swedish Migration Board that they must go back to their native country.

The boys, Asa, Kenneth and Patrick Vuvu who aged 7, 13 and 14 , say they face torture and death if they're sent back. Now their schoolfriends, local residents and politicians are campaigning to keep them in Sweden.
Listen to Dave Russell's report

Two years ago they fled Congo Kinshasa with their mother seeking political asylum in Sweden after their father, a member of the political opposition, disappeared. Six months later after their plea for asylum in Sweden was rejected three times, the mother fled underground, hoping that with her 3 children living alone, they'd have a legal right to stay. The boys now live with a guardian.

The Swedish Migration Board has said that it found no evidence that the children faced torture by being sent back to Congo. It did say that it would never leave children in a country on their own but if it could find a relative or another acceptable way, then it would follow the children over there and hand them into safe care. But it wouldn't do that until it was 100 percent sure that the boys would be looked after.


Saturday, 6 June 2009

TRIBUNAL SUPERIOR DE MADRID DA LA RAZÓN A UN MENOR MARROQUÍ QUE FUE EXPULSADO DOS VECES COMO ADULTO .

INMIGRACIÓN UNA OPORTUNIDAD: TRIBUNAL SUPERIOR DE MADRID DA LA RAZÓN A UN MENOR MARROQUÍ QUE FUE EXPULSADO DOS VECES COMO ADULTO .
viernes, junio 05, 2009


TSJM da la razón a un menor marroquí que fue expulsado dos veces como adulto, sin que se cumpliera la Ley de Extranjería

Tras las dos expulsiones regresó a España y se quedó en la calle; las ONG creen que está en prisión para adultos pero no le localizan
MADRID, 4 Jun. (EUROPA PRESS) -
El Tribunal Superior de Justicia de Madrid (TSJM) ha dado la razón a un menor marroquí que fue expulsado hasta dos veces de España sin que la Administración Pública cumpliera "ninguno de los requisitos establecidos" por el Reglamento de la Ley de Extranjería, porque fue considerado adulto cuando sólo tenía 16 años de edad y no fue escuchado durante el proceso. Sin embargo, no se sabe dónde está ahora el joven.

Monday, 18 May 2009

Boy's detention raised in Commons

BBC NEWS | UK | Scotland | Glasgow, Lanarkshire and West | Boy's detention raised in Commons

The case of a four-year-old boy held at the Dungavel detention centre in Lanarkshire has been raised in the House of Commons.

Glasgow SNP MP John Mason asked the immigration minister, Phil Woolas, why Arouna Gaye, who has medical problems, had been "imprisoned" there.

He and his mother, Fatou Felicite Gaye, 38, were removed from their home in Glasgow in a dawn raid last Thursday.

Their case has prompted anger among asylum campaigners and politicians.

Their removal to Dungavel came days after measures aimed at ending the detention of children at the controversial centre were announced.

Ms Gaye is from the Ivory Coast but her son was born in Scotland.

It is understood she had an application rejected in 2005 and has since had five appeals refused.

“ It is regrettable that on some occasions, people who have not cooperated with the decision of the independent tribunals and courts who otherwise would abscond in their view, do face detention ”
Phil Woolas Immigration minister

Mr Woolas said he could not discuss the case in detail.

He added: "On the general policy of detaining children, that is of course a last resort and we have indeed the programmes to look at alternatives.

"But it is regrettable that on some occasions, people who have not co-operated with the decision of the independent tribunals and courts who otherwise would abscond in their view, do face detention."

Speaking after raising the matter at Home Office Question Time in the Commons, Mr Mason said: "There is no excuse for the UK Government's actions concerning Fatou Felicite Gaye and her son Arouna.

"This four-year-old has already been treated for post-traumatic stress disorder caused by previous interaction with the Border Agency.

"The UK Government are detaining a child born in Scotland in an immigration centre that is not fit for children."

Pilot project

The mother and son had been due to be deported from the country on Monday.

However, a spokesman for the Unity Centre, which offers advice and aid to asylum seekers and refugees in Glasgow, said their flight had been cancelled at the last minute.

He also claimed that the family were detained before their case was officially refused.

He added: "The official letter giving grounds for why Fatou's case should be refused is unusually dated by hand as being written on 14 May 2009, the same day that Fatou was detained at 0645 BST.

"Therefore Fatou and Arouna have not been given any opportunity to return following the refusal of their case."

A pilot project due to launch in June will see failed asylum seekers housed in former council flats in Glasgow before they return to their own countries.