Petition updateStop all charter flight deportations to Jamaica and other Commonwealth countriesAnother Charter Flight to Jamaica while majority of Windrush victims receive nothing
ZITA HOLBOURNELONDON, ENG, United Kingdom
Oct 31, 2021

Dear Supporters 

The second mass deportation flight to Jamaica this calendar year and the third within a 1 year period,  is scheduled  for  10th November. 

In the meantime the majority of the victims of the Windrush Scandal have not been compensated still.

Recent data I have seen shows that the largest proportion of people applying for compensation, a total of 356 people have been offered zero compensation and the vast majority of those awarded compensation have not been paid at all  with applications  from the previous two years still undecided.

We are painfully aware that several people have died without receiving any compensation at all and it weighs heavy on our heart that a close family member of one of our BARAC UK officers  who was a victim of the Windrush Scandal and  who became very ill  as a result, has sadly passed away very recently  and a week after passing received a letter telling him his application for compensation has been refused. I am sure you will join me in sending deepest condolences to his family who are a close part of our BARAC family.

When I first started campaigning against mass deportations to Jamaica it was way before the term 'Windrush Scandal' was being used, but we warned then that those being deported were part of the Windrush generation, people who had lived the vast majority of their lives in the UK and contributed to the economy and society , raising children and grandchildren. 

This is an article I wrote in 2016 about it for The Guardian newspaper: https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2016/sep/08/50-people-snatched-deported-jamaica-uk-immigration

It is now the children and grandchildren of the Windrush generation who are being targeted for these subsequent deportation flights including the one in November. The vast majority of people booked onto the last two flights were not deported in the end because they were able to successfully argue their case and legally challenge the planned deportation - which shows that they should never have been targeted in the first place.

Yet again, amongst those being targeted are people who came to the UK as children. Previously there was an agreement between the Jamaican government and the UK government not to deport people who came to the UK as children, but yet again they are being targeted.

As with all the mass deportation flights over the past year, there is already a covid outbreak in at least one detention centre because of the lack of action to protect people and follow appropriate hygiene procedures including the provision of PPE.

The majority of people targeted are also parents so this means that children will again be living through the trauma of being torn apart from a parent.

The act of mass deportation is brutal and inhumane.

But this flight coincides with COP26. The people most impacted by the climate crisis and climate displacement are those in the global south, black and brown people, including those in the Caribbean region. It is irresponsible to charter a flight which  has capacity for 200 or more passengers with only 10 to 15 people onboard. contributing to  global CO2 emissions. 

In addition there is the issue of cost. The UK government spent almost 9 million pounds  on deportation flights in 2020 including £500000 on flights that never took off.

Here's what you can do if you are impacted or want to take action  to oppose: 

1. If you or a family member or friend are or may be impacted by the Jamaica deportation flight, we urge you to get legal advice and representation as soon as possible - there is still a window  of a few days, whereby someone not yet detained and in receipt of a removal notice, could be detained and booked on the flight.  It leaves little time to organise legal representation once detained and in addition during the pandemic there have been issues of phone signals not working and limited or no access to computer rooms in detention centres essentially barring access to legal advice and support.

2. Write to your local MP and ask them to intervene. You can adapt our template letter here which we published to oppose the summer of deportation flights: http://blackactivistsrisingagainstcuts.blogspot.com/2021/07/take-action-against-home-office-summer.html

3. Share our posts on social media using the hashtags  #Jamaica50 and #stoptheplane

4. Join the demo organised by Movement for Justice on 4th November at 3.30pm assembling outside the Jamaica High Commission  - see image with this update or @followmfj on twitter. 

5. These mass deportation flights are part of the ongoing hostile environment  and we would also ask that you join us in opposing the Nationality and Borders Bill #killbordersbill 

I have spoken about this Bill at a number of recent conferences  - you can watch here - I am at approx 30 minutes in:

https://www.facebook.com/watch/?v=252141736927131

6. Please sign our joint petition opposing the government's policy to turn away small boats of refugees, the majority of whom are children  by pushing them back out to sea here: https://actionstorm.org/petitions/stop-the-government-turning-away-small-boats-of-migrants-6148cb336d5cf

I would also like to thank everyone who donated to our crowdfunder to raise legal fees for Bruce Mpofu who was deported to Zimbabwe during the summer - Bruce came to the UK when he was nine years old.  

https://www.crowdfunder.co.uk/help-us-reverse-bruces-deportation-to-zimbabwe

Additional funds raised go towards Bruce's living costs and then our campaigning work on these issues. 

Thank you for your support. 

#jamaica50 #stoptheplane #climatecrisis #killbordersbill

Regards

 

Zita

 

Zita Holbourne 

National Chair BARAC UK 

 

 

 

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