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A
“Bleak House” for Our Times An
investigation into Yarl’s Wood Removal Centre
by
Legal
Action for Women
in
collaboration with the All African Women’s Group, Black Women’s Rape
Action Project and Women Against Rape.
By
Tim Cleary
21
December 2005, 4:00pm
In
true Dickensian fashion, a new report reveals the appalling treatment of
society's forgotten victims, namely female rape survivors and torture
victims held at Yarl's Wood Removal Centre.
15
December
saw the launch of the findings of an investigation into the conditions
provided for women detained at Bedfordshire's Yarl's Wood Removal Centre
and the neglect on the part of the centre and the Home Office with regard
to detainees' physical and mental well-being. A
'Bleak House' for Our Times - An investigation into women's rights
violations at Yarl's Wood Removal Centre is the result of
collaborative work between Legal Action for Women (LAW), Befitting
the Dickensian allusion in its title, A
'Bleak House' for Our Times is a damning indictment of an
interminable system of neglect, where the very system that should have
been set up to care for victims ends up damaging and ruining those caught
up in it. The findings differ remarkably from the Home Office's official
line that 'families have dedicated accommodation within removal centres,
comfortable rooms, and are treated with humanity, dignity and respect'.[1] From
information given by 130 women detained at Yarl's Wood, the report
provides important quantitative and qualitative material of a disturbing
nature. The majority of the women have arrived from unstable African
countries and The
women report sexual intimidation, racism and brutality in detention. To be
called 'black monkeys' who 'don't deserve to be here', it seems, is
commonplace in such centres. Added to such behaviour on the part of the
guards, the food given to detainees is known to be unsuitable for
consumption, the healthcare poor and the detainees are penalised for
speaking out about their plight. The lack of an outlet for their
grievances has led to a number of hunger strikes, including a four-week
hunger strike by over thirty women at the centre, and has driven others to
attempt suicide. However,
unlike the characters of Charles Dickens's Bleak
House, who wait eternally for the fate of a drawn-out legal
case to be decided, 12 per cent of the female interviewees at Yarl's Wood
were found to have been subject to a recently introduced 'fast-track'
process to remove them swiftly from the country and to remove them from
the conscience of the Home Office. This is despite strong evidence showing
that these women have been victims of abuse in the past and, on
deportation or beforehand, risk falling victim again in the present and
the future. In fact, 70 per cent of those interviewed reported fleeing
their home countries after suffering rape or other sexual violence. (One
should not forget that, added to this figure, half of the remaining
interviewees had suffered other forms of torture.) The report also details
figures of domestic violence, forced prostitution and the threat of
genital mutilation. The accounts of rape and torture given by many women
are often known to be disregarded and dismissed with indifference,
presumably because those judging the particular cases deem the women's
accounts 'bogus'. The 'fast-track' scheme implemented at Yarl's Wood and
other removal centres in the To
treat the accounts of vulnerable people with such indifference reveals a
system that is more concerned with a policy of forced removals than a
system of care and counselling. And, very disturbingly, the attempted
removals documented in the report reveal the use of violence against those
who had come to the Where
the testimonies of rape victims are rejected as false, where expert
evidence showing physical and mental scars is disregarded, and where there
is no adequate system to care for the most vulnerable in society, there
can be no solution to the current situation. This
report will hopefully stir more people into action, and encourage legal
and health professionals and members of the public to stand alongside the
indefatigable campaigners in Bedfordshire and across the |