Officials often underestimate the dangers faced by failed asylum seekers who are forcibly sent home, writes Jackie Fearnley

The recent Human Rights Watch report on the harm done to Cameroonian asylum seekers, both while they were trying to make their claims in the US and when repatriated in a blaze of publicity, should be required reading for all asylum decision-makers (African migrants deported in Trump era suffered abuse on return, 10 February).

From my experience of helping Cameroonian torture survivors over the past 14 years, I have noted that Home Office decision-makers, and many judges, can fatally underestimate the degree of risk attached to the forcible return process, particularly as failed asylum seekers are viewed as having brought the country into disrepute and can be punished with imprisonment.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Father Yod: the 1970s cult leader whose wild psychedelia was more suited to Disneyland than dive bars

In the 1970s, no one knew what to do with the Ya…

Pontins death: decision to restrain man unlawful – inquest

Jury finds Pontins staff in Suffolk failed to follow policy while restraining…

‘Most of us are sick of the attention’: Barnard Castle residents on the end of the Cummings era

Durham town became synonymous with ‘eye tests’ after No 10 aide’s infamous…