Quellenangabe:
Coalition to stop deportations to Iraq (vom 07.07.2006),
URL: http://no-racism.net/article/1744/,
besucht am 04.12.2024
[07. Jul 2006]
A conference, hold in London on 24th of June 2006, called by a coalition of groups and organisations against the deportation of asylum seekers to Iraq, called on the government to stop deportations.
It also wants the government to grant protection to all Iraqi asylum seekers and recognise them as victims of war and allow them the right to work or to receive a decent level of benefit. The release of the remaining Iraqi asylum seekers held in detention is a further demand.
RESOLUTION of the Conference of the Coalition to Stop Deportations to Iraq, London, 24 June 2006
This conference notes that Iraq is a highly dangerous country and that its inhabitants still suffer the US/British occupation, rising sectarian strife, rampant corruption, general lawlessness, daily kidnappings, abductions, large-scale killings by death squads and suicide bombers; and women are at risk of honour killings. Power and water supplies and medical facilities still do not function properly, three years on from the invasion, and many people cannot get sufficient food or food that is fit to eat. The IMF is pressing for abolition of the basic food ration. Many places are catastrophically contaminated with uranium as a result of the last two wars.
This conference also notes that Kurdistan (Northern Iraq), to which people are now being returned, at present via the so-called “voluntary returns programme”, is still part of Iraq and, although not suffering full scale open warfare like much of Iraq, suffers from many of the other problems listed above. In addition it is still unsafe politically for people who originally left because of persecution by Kurdish parties or Islamist groups, and it has large and rising numbers of displaced persons who still do not have permanent homes or jobs or tolerable living conditions.
This conference therefore calls on the British government to: