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UK: Three deaths in immigration detention (vom 27.11.2011),
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[27. Nov 2011]

UK: Three deaths in immigration detention

July / August 2011: Is it significant that two people have been found dead in two different detention centres in as many days - and three have died in a month?

All that the Home Office will confirm is that on Sunday 31 July, 2011 'A 35-year-old male being held at Colnbrook Immigration Removal Centre died' and that it is in the 'process of contacting his family'. As yet the man has not been named, nor has any information on his nationality or the circumstances of his death been released. However, there have been reports from the centre that the man was possibly American. Colnbrook (next to Harmondsworth detention centre close to Heathrow airport) is run by Serco, which also operates the London bike hire scheme and DLR (amongst many other businesses).

Then, on Tuesday 2 August, an as yet unidentified man, who was apparently facing imminent deportation, was found hanged at Campsfield removal centre near Oxford. The centre is run by the private company, MITIE care and custody. Conflicting reports suggest he was either found hanged or that he cut himself with razor blades.

A spokesperson from the :: Campaign to Close Campsfield, which held a vigil in Oxford following the death, said: 'This is yet another shocking event in the history of Campsfield House, where innocent people are locked without time limit, and in daily fear of removal to the nightmare conditions that drove them to leave their home country in the first place. Just being locked up in these conditions is enough to seriously affect a person's mental health.'


Death three weeks earlier at Colnbrook


Shockingly, these two deaths occurred within days of one another and just a few weeks after 47-year-old Pakistani migrant, Muhammed Shuket, died on his way to hospital from Colnbrook on 2 July.

What is happening in detention centres? Are they overcrowded like prisons? Or has the rate of deportations increased? A recent report in the Guardian[1] revealed that people held at Tinsley House (run by G4S) were being taken to the airport for deportation as 'reserves' in case others could not be deported. This practice has been termed 'distressing and inhumane' by the Chief Inspector of Prisons.

The use of force during deportations has also been highlighted in recent weeks after new research was published which found that seated restraint techniques increased the risk of harm or death, with volunteers who took part in restraint experiments, repeatedly reporting that they were unable to breathe.[2] The research is particularly significant, as it appears that Jimmy Mubenga died after apparently being restrained in such a way during his deportation. (Read an IRR News story :: 'Justice for Jimmy Mubenga')

Very little is known about the three men who have died in recent weeks and very little will probably be revealed about them and the circumstances of their deaths until their inquests which are unlikely to be held for some years. We must find ways of holding the Home Office and its contractors to account, and we must ensure that such deaths are not forgotten by the passage of time.


Other deaths in immigration detention centres


Below we list the deaths of the fourteen others who have died immigration detention centres since 1989.[3]


The IRR monitors the deaths of asylum seekers and undocumented migrants and our most recent report Driven to Desperate Measures: 2006-2010 can be read :: here.


Endnotes:


[1] Alan Travis, :: ''Inhumane' act of taking deportation reserves to airport condemned', Guardian, 26 July 2011.
[2] Alan Travis, :: ' Restraining technique used by officials 'increases risk of death''', Guardian, 27 July 2011.
[3] This listing includes all deaths in immigration removal centres, self inflicted and otherwise. There have also been numerous deaths of immigration detainees in prisons, young offenders institutes and psychiatric hospitals in the UK, for further information, see the IRR's report: Driven to Desperate Measures: 2006-2010, download it :: here.

Article by Harmit Athwal, published first on 04. Aug 2011 @ :: irr.org.uk