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Date: November 22, 2024 Fri

Time: 12:12 pm

Results for migrant detention

6 results found

Author: Doctors Without Borders - Medecins Sans Frontieres

Title: Migrants in Detention: Lives on Hold

Summary: This report documents the impact of detention on the mental health and well being of migrants and asylum seekers in Greece and reveals the unacceptable living conditions in three detention centers (Pagani on Lesvos Island, Filakio in Evros and Venna in Rodopi(. The report calls on the Greek government to ensure humane and dignified living conditions in detention centres and to consider alternatives, especially for vulnerable groups.

Details: Athens: Medecins Sans Frontieres, 2010. 31p.

Source: Internet Resource: Accessed September 17, 2010 at: http://www.msf.org/source/countries/europe/greece/2010/Migrants_in_detention.pdf

Year: 2010

Country: Greece

URL: http://www.msf.org/source/countries/europe/greece/2010/Migrants_in_detention.pdf

Shelf Number: 119826

Keywords:
Illegal Aliens
Mental Health
Migrant Detention
Migration

Author: Migreurop

Title: Europe's Murderous Borders

Summary: Born in 2002, the Migreurop network brings together activists and over forty associations from thirteen countries both north and south of the Mediterranean. Its goal is to collect information to reveal and denounce the effects of the European Union's migration policies insofar as human rights violations are concerned, particularly in places of detention. The map of camps for foreigners in Europe and in Mediterranean countries drawn up by Migreurop, which is regularly updated, has become a reference in this field. Since 2008, the Migreurop network's work has taken on the form, in particular, of a Borders Observatory that rests upon a number of tools: apart from the divulging of information on human rights violations at borders through its e-mail list and website, Migreurop has launched a campaign for a 'Right of access in the places of detention for migrants', and has set up a working group on the consequences of readmission agreements reached between the European Union and its neighbours. In September 2009, Migreurop published an 'Atlas of migrants in Europe', which aims to be a work of critical geography of border controls. Migreurop releases this report on the violation of human rights at borders, 'Murderous Borders', within the framework of the Borders Observatory. For this first edition, Migreurop has chosen to focus on four symbolic poles of the misdeeds of the policies enacted by the European Union: the Greek-Turkish border, the Calais region in northwestern France, that of Oujda, in eastern Morocco, and the island of Lampedusa in the far south of Italy. They represent as many stops, of varying length and too often tragic, in the odyssey of thousands of people who, every year, seek to flee persecutions through chosen or obligatory exile, or simply to escape the fate that is reserved to them, by attempting to reach Europe.

Details: Paris: Migreurop, 2009. 51p.

Source: Internet Resource: Accessed August 6, 2014 at: http://www.migreurop.org/IMG/pdf/Rapport-Migreurop-nov2009-en-final.pdf

Year: 2009

Country: Europe

URL: http://www.migreurop.org/IMG/pdf/Rapport-Migreurop-nov2009-en-final.pdf

Shelf Number: 132903

Keywords:
Border Control
Border Security
Human Rights (Europe)
Immigrant Detention
Immigration
Migrant Detention
Migrants

Author: Migreurop

Title: European Borders: Controls, detention and deportations

Summary: Abbiamo fermato l'invasione: "We have stopped the invasion", a Northern League poster boasted in March 2010 before the regional elections in Italy. The press could rejoice about seeing "Lampedusa returned to the fishermen", since the identification and expulsion centre on the island, which had seen over 30,000 "illegals" disembark in 2008, and still 1,220 in February 2009, was henceforth empty since October. In turn, the Italian government was trumpeting the fact that, against "illegal" immigration, firmness had ended up paying off. From the other islands in the Sicily Channel to Malta, to the Canary islands, and to the coasts of Andalusia in Spain, the same fact could be noted: unwanted arrivals on the coasts had ended, at least on that side of Europe. Moreover, at a time when Migreurop is completing its second annual report, it has even been stated that Libya has closed its detention centres - those camps that were hastily created following great inputs of "aid" from north of the Mediterranean. Readers should read this report with caution, because, in the field of migration, the gateways and routes open up and close down very quickly, in accordance with the deals between European Union member states and those between the latter and so-called "third" countries, in spite of the strong trends that we denounce here.

Details: Paris: Migreurop, 2010. 132p.

Source: Internet Resource: http://www.migreurop.org/IMG/pdf/rapport-migreurop-2010-en_-_2-121110.pdf

Year: 2010

Country: Europe

URL: http://www.migreurop.org/IMG/pdf/rapport-migreurop-2010-en_-_2-121110.pdf

Shelf Number: 132972

Keywords:
Border Control
Border Security
Human Rights (Europe)
Immigrant Detention
Immigration
Migrant Detention
Migrants

Author: Suarez, Ximena

Title: A Trail of Impunity:Thousands of Migrants in Transit Face Abuses amid Mexico's Crackdown

Summary: On September 3, 2016, in a public event with the United States' Republican party presidential candidate Donald Trump, Mexican president Enrique Pena Nieto commented on how essential it is for his government and for Mexico's relationship with the United States to make Mexico's southern border with Central America "more secure." This discourse is not new. In July 2014 Mexico announced the controversial "Southern Border Program" and has since pursued policies that prioritize securing the country's Southern Border from migrants through control measures and a significant increase in detentions and deportations, ignoring concerns about the human rights of migrants and potential refugees traveling through Mexico, in particular from Honduras, El Salvador, and Guatemala. A new assessment of the situation reveals that migration enforcement operations keep increasing, at a time when Mexican authorities have not sufficiently improved their capacity to screen migrants to detect protection concerns and to seriously investigate crimes against migrants in transit in the country. Official data, information obtained through freedom-of-information requests, journalistic sources, and information from some of the shelters assisting migrants in Mexico reveals that 2016 may be the year with the highest number of detentions, deportations, and asylum petitions in Mexico.

Details: WOLA; Fundar: Centro de Analisis e Investigacion, and the Casa del Migrante Frontera con Justicia, in Saltillo, Coahuila, 2016. 15p.

Source: Internet Resource: Accessed October 15, 2016 at: https://www.wola.org/analysis/a-trail-of-impunity/

Year: 2016

Country: Mexico

URL: https://www.wola.org/analysis/a-trail-of-impunity/

Shelf Number: 144875

Keywords:
Deportation
Human Rights Abuses
Illegal Migrants
Immigration Enforcement
Migrant Detention
Migrants

Author: Amnesty International

Title: Stranded Hope: Hungary's Sustained Attack on the Rights of Refugees and Migrants

Summary: Fences, teargas, and draconian legislation: over the last year the Hungarian authorities have baulked at little in their determination to keep refugees and migrants out of the country. The government's programme of militarization, criminalization and isolation has ushered in a set of measures which have resulted in violent push-backs at the border with Serbia, unlawful detentions inside the country and dire living conditions for those waiting at the border. This briefing documents the pernicious consequences of Hungary's current policies in flagrant breach of international human rights and refugee law and EU directives.

Details: London: AI, 2016. 30p.

Source: Internet Resource: Accessed November 2, 2016 at: https://www.amnesty.org/en/documents/eur27/4864/2016/en/

Year: 2016

Country: Hungary

URL: https://www.amnesty.org/en/documents/eur27/4864/2016/en/

Shelf Number: 145006

Keywords:
Asylum Seekers
Human Rights Abuses
Illegal Migrants
Migrant Detention
Migrants
Refugees

Author: Hungarian Helsinki Committee,

Title: Crossing a Red Line: How EU Countries Undermine the Right to Liberty by Expanding the Use of Detention of Asylum Seekers upon Entry

Summary: In February 2019, the Hungarian Helsinki Committee (HHC) along with several partner organisations, including the Global Detention Project (GDP), launched the final report of their joint initiative, the Red Line detention project, whose objective is to document and raise awareness of how EU states' border "reception" procedures are increasingly used for the detention of asylum seekers. Initially launched in 2017, the project received financial support from the European Programme for Integration and Migration (EPIM) and involved NGOs in Hungary (HHC), Bulgaria (Foundation for Access to Rights), Greece (Greek Council for Refugees), and Italy (Italian Council for Refugees). The final report, "Crossing a Red Line: How EU Countries Undermine the Right to Liberty by Expanding the Use of Detention of Asylum Seekers upon Entry," is based on assessments made by project partners of how the morphing of "reception" into "detention" at the borders of their countries is undermining asylum seekers' right to liberty. The GDP's role was to assist the project in using UN human rights mechanisms, like the Working Group on Arbitrary Detention, to raise awareness of these trends at the international level. In addition, the GDP worked individually with each national partner to use the GDP's online database, the Global Immigration Detention Observatory, to develop comprehensive detention data profiles of each country's key immigration detention-related indicators as well as operations at the main detention centres covered in the report. The Red Line detention report was launched at an event hosted at Quaker House in Brussels on 6 February 2018, which included presentations by each country partner in addition to presentations by Elina Steinerte, vice-chair of the UN Working Group on Arbitrary Detention; Judith Sargentini, member of the European Parliament; the GDP's Michael Flynn; ECRE's Minos Mouzourakis; and HHC's Grusa Matevzic. KEY FINDINGS OF THE RED LINE DETENTION REPORT The use of detention upon entry increased in 2015 with the increase in the number of migrant arrivals, but it has continued to this date despite a significant decrease in asylum applications in Bulgaria, Hungary, and Italy. In 2017, 73.5% of asylum seekers were detained in Hungary (an increase from 2.9%) and 59% in Bulgaria, while the average length of detention has also increased in both countries. In 2017 the use of migrant detention increased in Italy by 25% and in Greece by 75%. The research revealed various practices of de facto detention, such as "protective custody" of children in Greece, hot spot detention in Greece and Italy, transit zone detention in Greece and Hungary, detention during push-back in Greece, detention on boats in Italy and detention in pre-removal centres in Greece. The common element in these forms of detention is that "de facto detention" occurs when individuals are deprived of their liberty in the absence of a detention order. Their confinement is not classified as detention under domestic law and their only possibility of release is by leaving to another country. The increased frequency with which asylum seekers are detained upon entry is motivated by a range of different practical, political, and legal considerations. It has been used as a general response to cope with unprecedented pressure on the reception and asylum processing systems in all of the countries studied (including as a response to the lack of open reception accommodation facilities in Bulgaria and Greece). Detention has also been promoted as a security measure (e.g. against terrorism) and used as a means to prevent asylum seekers from crossing external borders in a bid to gain political support for the ruling government (in Bulgaria, Hungary, and Italy). No clear evidence confirms that detention reduces the flow of arrivals as a response to an increased migratory pressure. Global Immigration Detention Observatory Data Profiles (Appendix to the Red Line Detention Report) I. Bulgaria Profile (Lyubimets Detention Centre (Special Home for Temporary Accommodation of Foreigners and Sofia Busmantsi Detention Centre (Special Home for Temporary Accommodation of Foreigners)) II. Hungary Profile (Roszke Transit Zone Detention Centre and Tompa Transit Zone Detention Centre) III. Greece Profile (Fylakio Pre-Removal Detention Centre and Samos Vathy Reception and Identification Centre) IV. Italy Profile (Trapani Pre-Removal Centre and Lampedusa (Contrada Imbriacola) Hotspot)

Details: Helsinki: The Authors, 2019. 88p.

Source: Internet Resource: Accessed March 5, 2019 at: https://www.globaldetentionproject.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/02/crossing_a_red_line_REPORT.pdf

Year: 2019

Country: Europe

URL: https://www.globaldetentionproject.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/02/crossing_a_red_line_REPORT.pdf

Shelf Number: 154808

Keywords:
Asylum Seekers
Border Security
Human Rights Abuses
Immigrant Detention
Immigrants
Immigration Policy
Migrant Detention