Friday, 13 March 2015

The UK: Illimited detention of asylum seekers, including victims of trafficking and torture



Part of the immigration removal centre on Western Heights Formerly the borstal but now run by as a removal centre for illegal immigrants, 14 October 2009, by Nick Smith. Photo from Wikicommons.



Over 30,000 people entered the UK’s detention centres in 2013 compared to just over 4,000 in Germany which receives four times as many asylum applications. In 2014, 15,658 in detention centres were forcibly removed from the UK, and 13,739 were released back into the community, so their detention was unnecessary.

The UK has 13 immigration removal centres (IRCs):


Brook House, Gatwick
Campsfield House, Oxfordshire
Colnbrook, Middlesex
Dover, Kent
Dungavel House, South Lanarkshire
Harmondsworth, Middlesex
Haslar, Hampshire
Larne House, Antrim
Morton Hall, Lincolnshire
Pennine House, Manchester
The Verne
Tinsley House, Gatwick
Yarl's Wood, Bedfordshire


The UK is the only European Union country that lacks a time limit on immigration detention.

According to a report by an All-Party Group of the House of Commons and the House of Lords, 'the most populated IRCs are either converted high security prisons or have been built to that specification.'

The UK is also detaining people  who are victims of trafficking or torture. Instead, it should be referring them to the National Referral Mechanism (NRM), which is a framework for identifying victims of human trafficking and ensuring they receive the appropriate protection and support.


Unlimited immigration detention contributes to lasting mental health problems among detainees. For instance, according to IRIN:

A young woman from Guinea who was detained upon her arrival at Heathrow Airport. During 17 months in a detention centre, she suffered a mental collapse and was frequently isolated or hand-cuffed to prevent her harming herself. In July 2014, the High Court ruled that her detention was unlawful and that her human rights were violated.

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Sunday, 8 March 2015

Gender and race discrimination at universities



 Source of photo: Wikimedia commons.

Students:

Undergraduates: 50.3 per cent of students at the top 400 institutions are women.

Postgraduates: FemalePhD graduates equal or outnumber men in all fields of study, except for science, mathematics and computing (40 per cent), and engineering, manufacturing and construction (26 per cent).

Academics:

In Turkey, 47.5 per cent of staff at the top five universities are female.
In the US and Sweden, the figure is 36 per cent.
In the UK (48 institutions in the survey mentioned in The Times Higher Education), women make up 35 per cent of academic personnel.
Only 31 per cent of academics are women in Norway and Denmark.
The widest gender gap is in Japan: only 12.7 per cent of the academics at the country’s top-rated universities are women.

In general, women represent 43 per cent of academics in the arts and humanities, 38.5 per cent in the social sciences, 19 per cent in the physical sciences and 15.6 per cent in engineering and technology.

In the UK: out of 18,500 professors, 85 are black and 17 are black women.

Table. Proportions of men and women in a typical academic career, students and academic staff, EU-27, 2002-2010