Bishop calls on UK government to support migrants and refugees in the time of COVID-19 pandemic

Bishop Paul McAleenan has called on the government and Catholic community to ensure that vulnerable migrants and refugees are not overlooked in the response to the COVID-19 pandemic:

“In supporting the Government’s recommendations to curtail the spread of COVID-19 the Church keeps in mind migrants and refugees.  We must never forget that they are included among the vulnerable.

Staying at home will lower one’s chances of infection. Therefore the requirement placed on some migrants and refugees to report at immigration centres or police stations should be suspended and those held in detention centres while their cases are explored should be released.

Nor should we forget at this time casual workers and those who rely on frequent income to keep their accommodation. They must be included in supportive economic packages to prevent destitution and homelessness.

Catholic charities are doing all they can to provide support for migrants, refugees and others in need in the present crisis. Through prayer and through contributions to these charities the Catholic community and all people of goodwill can offer help to those who need it.  We are encouraged to protect ourselves and others.

I ask those who, through policy and through charity can make a difference to the lives of others, not to neglect the well-being of migrants and refugees when thinking about COVID-19.”

Cecilia Taylor-Camara, Senior Advisor for Migration and Refugee Policy at the Catholic Bishops’ Conference added:

“We are particularly concerned about the lack of emergency accommodation for people to self-isolate and socially distance themselves. Many undocumented migrants and people who have been refused asylum have nowhere to go, leaving them at extraordinary risk and undermining efforts to prevent transmission. Those same people will also struggle to access healthcare and may be unclear about whether they can seek help from the NHS.

At the same time it is important not to forget refugees in other parts of the world, many who are facing this crisis in overcrowded conditions with little access to healthcare at all.”

Kindertransport Anniversary Campaign further news and stewarding on November 15th

For those who have not caught the update on this campaign to admit up to 10,000 unaccompanied migrant minors from across Europe, on Independent Catholic News, do read up via this link.

https://www.indcatholicnews.com/news/35947
And then please consider coming to help steward at the historic Kindertransport commemoration event at Friends House, Euston Road NW1 on 15th November.  You would be needed from 13.30 to 4.30 pm.  Please get back to me as soon as possible if you can do this.  Tickets for the main event have gone but you can attend if you are a steward!  A large number of surviving ‘Kinder’ will be present, as well as current successfully settled young refugees, politicians and church leaders.  The Catholic official representation will be by Archbishop Emeritus Kevin McDonald.

I look forward to hearing from potential stewards.  Please email justice@rcdow.org.uk or leave a message on the office phone: 0208 888 4222.

Many thanks

Barbara Kentish

Diary of Calais events

August in Calais – not exactly a summer holiday for some!

I went to Calais for 5 days to recruit for our Justice and Peace October Cross-channel meeting.  Staying with Maria Skobstova House gave me a unique angle on life with young migrants. 

Calais seemed quiet and lethargic with heat when I arrived at the beginning of August, though a sea breeze made it slightly cooler than London.  Many shop fronts were shuttered, due to the holiday season, and few locals on the streets.   I had come to recruit for an Autumn day of cross-Channel dialogue between volunteers and NGOs, and stayed with other volunteers at a flat rented by Maria Skobstova House, helping out with basic housework in between encounters.

MS House contin ues to offer drop-in facilities to many young men, usually Eritrean, and very importantly, a chapel where they pray in their Orthodox tradition several times a week.  One volunteer described the people she met ‘a gentle people, at the end of a deeply harrowing journey’. These polite young men – the  French volunteers call them ‘exilés’ rather than migrants – continue to jump onto lorries to the UK as their best option for a viable future.  Since that is by definition a clandestine activity, and there is no large encampment, the febrile atmosphere of the Jungle seems long gone.  Instead they go about their business of surviving, quietly and with dignity.  Most live out, under tents or awnings, in little encampments on scrubby land around Calais, which are interspersed with the many depots and light industrial factories stretching for miles around the perimeter.  I took part in two ‘Maraudes’, not raids, as the name suggests, but more a sort of soup run, where food, water, hot drinks and toiletries might be distributed.

Mariam Guérey from Secours Catholique led one, on a midweek morning, where 5 of us helped to distribute tea and water.  Mainly, however, we donned rubber gloves, grabbed black refuse sacks and did a site clearance of some of the rubbish which collects when people live hand to mouth and are moved on regularly by the CRS – riot police from other regions.  Arriving in the early morning, I was told, the police slash the tents and spray the fabric of clothing and bedding with tear gas.  Volunteers are also treated with hostility, so that opposition to these armed personnel is virtually impossible.  Mariam smiled and greeted the young migrants with huge bonhomie, playing Eritrean music loudly when we arrived at a site, with the same aim as an ice-cream van might arrive in our street:  ‘We are here, we are your friends, we bring good things’ was the message.   

The second site we visited, the ‘Little Forest’, I had heard of from the young men at the Maria Skobstova drop in house.  Sandwiched between a pleasant residential area and the Calais ring road, this long patch of wooded land seemed a haven hiding many little tents, and was popular because of its proximity to a lorry park the migrants called ‘Belgium Parking’.  This was currently a favourite place to try entering the lorries.  So close to the port, it was being well-guarded however, and I met 2 young men who failed to reach the UK during my stay.  Finally, Mariam took us to the Auberge des Migrants warehouse, where the big NGOs, Utopia 56, Calais Kitchen, Help Refugees, and the Auberge itself, work together to provide support to the ‘exilés’ still flocking to and through Calais.   Exact numbers are difficult, but can be gauged by the number of meals distributed by huge modern efficient kitchen.  Currently around 700 could be in Calais, but Calais Kitchen also supplies Dunkirk, 20 plus miles away, and points in between.  So the total on that stretch of the north coast could be upwards of 2000.  Few women and children stay in Calais but move towards Dunkirk.

Before my next ‘Maraude’, I was fortunate to be invited to a meeting of the ‘Inter-asso’, the weekly meeting of the NGOs held on this occasion at Secours Catholique.  It proved an excellent snapshot of the state of play.  Present, as well as the main players already mentioned, were Amnesty International,  Gynecologistes sans Frontieres, Caritas Italy, Medecins du Monde, and of course Westminster Justice and Peace!  Each of the points I noted had backstories that I could only guess at, representing as they did a whole history of day-to-day specialised efforts for human rights whether to clean water, health, to the proper treatment of children or simply the right to demonstrate.  

  • Feelings were high over a very recent demonstration where an English activist called Tom had been deliberately pushed in front of an oncoming lorry by the CRS. We saw Youtube videos confirming this, though he was released after 48 hours.  Other UK volunteers had been threatened by police, and lawyers were on standby.
  • One lawyer at the meeting mentioned that written guides for those on demonstrations were on their website, and suggested hard copies in different languages might be distributed.
  • Worryingly, volunteers carrying out the ‘Maraudes’ have been bothered by the police, though this is a legal humanitarian activity.
  • Many reported an increase in alcoholism amongst the migrants and this would be referred to the various alcoholism support agencies in the city.
  • Some minors are refusing to talk at all to police when stopped, even to give their names. I was not sure if this was good or bad – discussion proceeding at such a pace!
  • Victory over the Council! There was much jubilation that some small concessions have been extracted from the Préfecture:  a lump sum of 1500 euros, 2 extra standby taps, more showers, and 900 jerrycans of water (the large plastic containers I saw at the Little Forest, containing about 18-20 litres).
  • Despite this, there was no mention of the human right to water, the original demand.  What is more, the Préfecture disputes the numbers of migrants, and the boycott which seems to exist regarding Council meetings will continue, since with no common agreement on basics, some NGOs see these joint discussions as a charade.
  • Medecins du Monde had made a serious attempt by to gather all health professionals around a table for dialogue, but some NGOs had shown negativity and the recent meeting had not been a success.
  • Finally, I was given the floor for a few minutes, to extend an invitation to all the NGOs to our day of dialogue in Dover on October 20th .  Justice and Peace in Southwark and Westminster have begun planning a day of ‘Friends in Solidarity across the Channel’, just to exchange information and get to know each other in our common humanitarian concern for the hundreds, if not thousands, who suffer at our common border.  There was a gratifying amount of interest.   Véronique, a volunteer at Secours Catholique, who has carried out ‘maraudes’ along the Calais coast for the last 15 years, was particularly anxious to know what happens to the young people on their ‘illegal’ arrival in Kent.  I promised to find people with more knowledge than me to speak at that day.

The meeting thus provided a fascinating snapshot of what was currently going on, even allowing for the remarks in slang I didn’t quite catch!   It certainly helped me understand a little of what I was seeing in my short visit.

Brother Johannes had suggested I talk to several individuals for their perspective.  A sobering talk with Leo from Eritrea helped me understand why it can be impossible for young exilés to return home, besides the high fences of the UK border.  As a government employee involved in a pay dispute, he had been imprisoned for 15 months, and emerged to find his job taken away, and the only option forced military service*.   His family sold cattle and jewellery for him to undertake the exile.   Having survived the  perilous journey North to the Mediterranean, Leo was finger-printed in Italy, and made his way through southern Europe to Calais, en route to the UK, where he hoped, and still hopes, to refresh his qualifications, with the good English he already possesses.  He has tried for 7 months to hitchhike a lorry across the Channel, attempting another sortie the day after our talk.  Alas for him, he returned defeated and sad;  I felt my conversation with him had perhaps also renewed his sense of frustration and futility.   A gentle, kind and quiet person, he explained Eritrean pop music to me, and we checked my son’s music career on the internet.  Next day, he set out in the daytime on a recce as to the possibilities of lorry rides at Belgium parking.  Another day, new hope.  I would really like to see him get to the UK.

My second ‘maraude’ was  organised by Maria Skobstova House, a weekly Saturday event, serving breakfast at the Little Forest.  Véronique, Lise and Gilles, all Calaisians who sometimes take ‘exilés’ into their homes in emergencies, do these runs regularly.   The ‘crime of solidarity’ has been dropped, and we distributed breakfast of tea, water, hardboiled eggs, tinned sardines, cake and fruit to a small crowd, who relaxed sufficiently to play a little football in the sunny clearing.   Week in and week out, it cannot always be so pleasant.  These Calais residents have conducted ‘maraudes’ continuously since the Sangatte camp days around 2001.

The Secours Catholique approach of ‘Aller Vers’, ‘Moving Towards’, is more than just the offer of material goodies, but of a hand of friendship.   The migrants need food, water, clothing, shelter, but more than all that, they need a reason to hope for better things.  ‘We are living like animals’, said Leo, referring to their life in the open air.   Yet with welcome and solidarity, miracles can happen.   The resilience of these young migrants is astonishing.  Given a helping hand one day – a shower, a meal, a set of new clothes, even just a smile – they can get up and carry on the next.

*Forced labour and slavery  in Eritrea

The mandatory national service continued to be extended indefinitely despite repeated calls from the international community on the government to limit conscription to 18 months. Significant numbers of conscripts remained in open-ended conscription, some for as long as 20 years. Despite a minimum legal conscription age of 18, children continued to be subjected to military training under the requirement that they undergo grade 12 of secondary school at Sawa National Service training camp, where they faced harsh living conditions, military-style discipline and weapons training. Women, in particular, faced harsh treatment in the camp including sexual enslavement, torture and other sexual abuse.  Amnesty International report 2017-18 

Update from Seeking Sanctuary

14 August 2018

AUGUST UPDATE

Despite  the holiday season important news (often overlooked by mainstream UK media) continues to arrive … not least that the recent extreme heatwave has proved a cause of much suffering, even for those used to hotter climates. The complete lack of shelter and accessible running water are just two of the problems, notwithstanding the efforts of the committed volunteers who are ever present with supplies, including fresh water and other essential goods.

NEWS ON THE DOVER MEMORIAL

Earlier in 2018 we told you about our desire to establish a memorial to those who have died seeking sanctuary in the UK. We know that the number is at least 150 since 2000 and still rising. The memorial will be a simple plaque to be placed next to the existing Chinese memorial in line of sight of the French coast. You can see the wording for the memorial here. We have now obtained all the relevant permissions and the cost is likely to be about £800. If you would like to make a donation towards this please let us know and we will let you know payment details in due course. The official inauguration is planned for later in the year, but we plan to visit the memorial at the end of following event.

SATURDAY 20 OCTOBER

As advised in July, we are collaborating with others to arrange conversations at St Paul’s Church in Dover about the situation facing exiles in Calais and in the UK, with attendance expected from people who live, volunteer and/or work there. We hope that many of you will tell other interested people and be able to join us. A flyer is attached and we will announce more details soon.

RECENT FIGURES AND THEIR IMPLICATIONS

The latest report from the UN’s International Organisation for Migration indicates that from 1 January to 25 July 2018, 55,001 migrants and refugees entered Europe by sea. This compares to 111,753 at this time last year, and more than 250,000 in 2016. So despite perceptions, the numbers are well down. However, the number of deaths is well up, with 2018 being one of the deadliest years on record. 1,504 men, women and children have died attempting the Mediterranean crossing, more than half of them since 1 June when Italy’s policy began to change. In Calais, the exiles stand out, huddled in small groups, seeking shade under trees at roadsides or beneath bridges, or walking through fields of long grass. In a patch of woodland next to a main road, around 60 young men from Eritrea sleep between the trees. Elsewhere, there are camps of Sudanese, Afghans, Kurds and Ethiopians (including Oromo Ethiopians). There are also people from Syria, Iraq and other African countries such as Chad and Cameroon. They are mostly men, although aid workers in nearby Dunkirk, report increasing arrivals of women and children.

For further updates from Seeking Sanctuary, see the website, http://www.seekingsanctuary.weebly.com

Spring Appeal for Calais migrant children

Spring Appeal 2018-3            After raising nearly £16000 for the Maria Skobstova House in Calais last Autumn we are opening up the appeal once again as the work goes on to reach out to young people adrift in Northern France, set on reaching the UK. On our European pilgrimage we were fortunate to meet dedicated Secours Catholique volunteers helping and monitoring the situation, which some have been doing for many years. Dismantling the ‘Jungle’ has not meant an end to the migrants’ quest to reach the UK – only a riskier environment. See our appeal leaflet for more details.

Update from Calais by Seeking Sanctuary

We are including this news update on our website to spread the word about the situation in Calais. The original article appeared on the Seeking Sanctuary website – click here to visit and find out more about their work. We will be holding a Spring appeal for the Calais Catholic Worker, Maria Skobtsova House, after Easter – watch out for more details!

UPDATE: The hazards of seeking sanctuary

Dear Friends

seekingsanctuaryAs we started to prepare this update, news came through of a 16 year old boy who has been blinded in one eye through police use of rubber bullets. The boy was shot during the attack with gas and rubber bullets against refugees who were trying to recuperate their possessions before the police destroyed their tents set up near the food distribution place in rue Verrotieres. He suffered severe injuries to his face and there is a risk for his remaining eye. And on recent form, he’ll sent straight back to the appalling squalor of wasteland where he has been staying. The two friends who accompanied him to make a complaint at the Police Station were themselves arrested for several hours. All this just after the French President’s visit to Calais. It is in the context of reports that the Police have become particularly heavy handed during the daily distribution of food and clothes. It seems that they were determined to break up the tents which provide a minimum of basic shelter and were not hesitating to use pepper spray to render the tents and blankets unusable.

So why the surge in arrivals in Calais, currently estimated to take the number there over 800? In part this is due to a cruel deception on the part of UK and French politicians. The news that the UK had agreed to be more flexible in accepting child migrants under the Dubs agreement and speed up the processing of applications travelled fast, with the result that many young people had their hopes raised, and made for Calais, only for them to be dashed. The new UK/French ‘accord’ has yet to bring any visible results. We are also very disturbed by the inter-racial violence being reported – it is a sad fact that violence increases when those involved lose all dignity and sense of hope. Apparently trafficking gangs run by Afghans are angry when Eritreans get into lorries that they plan to use for profit, or attract attention to areas where they wish to operate. Whatever the origin of this dispute, interest from traffickers seems to have lead to gunfire and several serious injuries.

The result is a growing number of very vulnerable young people who are at risk of being trafficked and sold into modern slavery. (We are often struck by the paradox of the firmness of the rhetoric against modern slavery here in the UK and our failure to denounce the abuse and trafficking of children just 20 miles from our shores). Hence the petition initiated by UNICEF calling on the authorities to reunite children – you will find details here.

Death is also a probability. Back in June 2009, 59 young Chinese were found dead in the back of a lorry in Dover. Since then the total deaths on either side of the Channel have risen to over 200, as people attempt to reach the UK in order to claim asylum – which can be done only on British soil.

And yet in all the squalor of the current situation, human dignity and optimism can still prevail. On his recent visit to Calais, Phil was pleased to see the new Day Centre near the centre of Calais run by Secours Catholique in full operation. People could relax, chat, learn new skills and play board games or get their hair cut in a warm hall, with a video cinema running in a small room alongside and a separate space for women to meet and upcycle damaged garments, which the young men had been proud to show off in a fashion show video. Phil was accompanied by young people from the ‘Bruderhof’ Community in South East Kent, to deliver blankets that they had made and spend time as volunteers with the Refugee Community Kitchen and the Warehouse.

The Catholic Worker House had been filled far beyond comfortable capacity with young people desperate to get away from the recent inter-racial violence. And we were delighted to provide three key organisations with the proceeds (€1320) of a very generous Christmas collection by a Catholic Parish in Suffolk. And for the future, if you are able to organise a collection, however modest, we will recommend NGO’s which can make best use of the money and arrange payment as required.

And so the future – will there be an amelioration of the situation in 2018? Only if those of us who feel passionate about the issues continue to put pressure on those in authority who can make a difference – on both sides of the Channel. The few children who have so far reached the UK were only admitted after huge pressure from those felt it their duty to make their voice heard.

Ben as a local Councillor recently took part in his local Holocaust Memorial Day observance – and was reminded of the remarkable efforts of Sir Nicholas Winton in the 1930’s to bring children out of danger into the UK through the ‘kindertransports’. It’s this kind of initiative that we need again in the turbulent and often intolerant nature of our politics over 70 years later.

Building Britain’s Welcome – a training with Safe Passage

As part of the Refugees Welcome initiative, Safe Passage (linked with Citizens UK and supported by Justice and Peace), will hold training on February 24th at Camden School for Girls in North London.  Workshops will range from how to campaign in the forthcoming local elections, to how to involve your MP, run ESOL classes, fundraise and more.  SafePassage Sign up via link:  https://actionnetwork.org/events/building-britains-welcome

Ethiopian hymns, the Dubs amendment and bivvy bags – Update on Calais

PrayerSpaceOn Sunday evening in Calais I was present at an Ethiopan Orthodox community service, at which a ‘Calais migrant’ officiated for his compatriots. Young men were quiet, prayerful, but sang powerfully their well-known hymns.

I was representing Westminster Justice and Peace which has supported the Catholic Worker house there for over 2 years, and which has just run an appeal for unaccompanied migrant children. Our astonishing success (£13000 plus) supports this fragile facility. Although, while our help is important, Brother Johannes maintains that the young people’s resilience is the priority. Regular prayers in the House support their identity and faith in this time of trial.

When we started raising money, it was seen as an emergency, one-off action. We are having to revise our assessment, and to understand that supporting refugees in Nord/Pas de Calais as the region is called, may be for the longterm. Calais is far from empty of refugees. With the burning of the Grande Synthe camp at Dunkirk and earlier razing of the Jungle, many camp in the dunes or woods, while the Calais authorities are taking aggressive steps to prevent another mass informal camp growing up. We reported back in September that the national police are raiding the Calais region to move migrants on, sometimes violently, even with pepper gas (Nobody should live like this, by the Human Trafficking Foundation details the situation).

The UK border sited on the other side of the Channel disguises the reality that there a huge metal grid, called by French human rights groups the ‘Wall of Shame’, ‘protecting’ the UK from invasions, but in practice preventing legitimate and urgent asylum being offered.

It is hard to know the numbers involved, and counting a population on the move is difficult but according to the Guardian,

‘The charity Help Refugees conducts monthly headcounts and estimates that there are at least 600 migrants in Calais, around 300 in Dunkirk and another 200 in small camps along the coast. The Refugee Community Kitchen, which cooks food for people living in small groups in wasteland around Calais and Dunkirk, says it is distributing 2,500 meals a day… The Calais prefecture said that it believed there were 450 migrants in the Calais area’. (Guardian 10th Aug 2017)

The Catholic Worker Drop-in centre was recently offering 100 showers a week as well as clothes washes in an impressive turnaround. On my visit I helped fold laundry which seemed to come in never-ending bundles.

The recent good news reported in ICN about better processing of young people was very welcome. Safe Passage organiser Juliet Kilpin wrote to us after our lobby of MPs,

‘I have some great news to share with you. Today the UK and French governments announced that they have opened a centre near Calais to enable the proper processing of unaccompanied child refugees. Children will be able to claim asylum safely and legally. While this centre is open, children with family in the UK won’t have to risk their lives making dangerous attempts to cross the channel to be with loved ones. Instead they will be able to have their case considered by British authorities in Calais. We understand that children with no family in the UK will also be able to be assessed at this new centre.’

This was indeed hopeful, as was the Parliamentary debate on unaccompanied minors shortly afterwards and available via the Safe Passage link: http://safepassage.org.uk/news_posts/parliament-debate-on-calais-and-unaccompanied-minors-in-europe/

If you need your faith in Parliamentary procedure boosted, do watch this debate. We must of course hold government to account on this. Meanwhile, many agencies are championing the rights of migrants on our border, here, and across the Channel:

“Safe Passage” and “Help Refugees” are helping Lord Alf Dubs to call for full implementation of both his amendment to the 2016 Immigration Act (meant to allow 3,000 minors to come to the UK) and the EU’s Dublin III Regulation (allowing children to join family in UK). Seeking Sanctuary continues to take clothing and sleeping bags across to Calais, while the Auberge des Migrants, Secours Catholique, Care4Calais and others continue to battle with the Calais authorities for the right to distribute food, water and clothing on the streets. Have a look at all of their impressive work online.

As previously, we suggest that those who want to take goods should look at the Seeking Sanctuary website for current ‘asks’, and if willing to take goods to Calais, should head for the Auberge des Migrants. We at Justice and Peace will shortly launch a Christmas appeal for the Catholic Worker house, and send a new list of requirements, including sleeping bags and ‘bivvy bags’ to enable sleeping outdoors on the Calais coast. This is a serious humanitarian situation which looks set to run and run.

Human Rights in a post-Brexit era

Barbara Kentish

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Sr Liz O’Donohoe with 3 students from Queen Mary College who study Human Rights

Around 60 people took part in the Westminster Justice and Peace annual day on Human Rights on Saturday October 28th. The Commission had decided that in this uncertain European transition period, it was time to reflect on the state of human rights across the continent, particularly, but not only, with reference to the migrant and refugee phenomenon. The session began with prayers around the Lampedusa Cross, symbol of welcome onto European shores.

JulieWardMEP

Julie Ward says EU is a Peace Project

Julie Ward MEP for the North West opened with the emphatic statement that the EU was first and foremost a Peace project in its conception, not simply a set of trading agreements. She pointed out in passing that there was not a European refugee crisis, as it is called, but a crisis of solidarity and humanity. Julie came late to politics, only becoming an MEP in 2014 after much campaigning through the arts, on, amongst other things, women’s issues and trafficking. She expressed outrage that no guarantees had been made to EU citizens living abroad whether in the UK or other EU countries. The so-called ‘Henry VIII law would short-circuit discussion and implement government wishes without challenge. The EU is a powerful human rights institution, and while we will remain with the Convention on Human Rights, we will leave the Charter of Fundamental Rights which strengthens many basic rights including those concerning data protection, children, disability, and workplace discrimination. The global achievements of the EU on human rights are not reported back sufficiently in the UK.

Patrick Riordan says the ground of human dignity is the basis of all rights

Dr Patrick Riordan SJ, lecturer in philosophy at Heythrop College, gave a scholarly examination of what we mean by rights, which, he explained, are discussed in very different registers. Lawyers talk about rights as principles to be defended legally. Philosophers try to establish whether there are intrinsic rights to being human, such as for water, air, food, while rights can also be claimed by individuals simply because they have a very strong wish for something. As to the question of why we believe in rights, this depends on what we believe to be the origin of human dignity, – which Christians see as deriving from our being made in God’s image. The dignity of the human provides the common language of rights.

NicoletteBusuttil

Nicolette Busuttil of JRS reminded us that standing up for rights costs us personally

Nicolette Busuttil, of the Jesuit Refugee Service, gave a vivid presentation of the relationship of her work to the rights which for many asylum seekers, are being violated: rights to safety, to work, to have a home, to asylum from persecution and so on. She spoke honestly of how reaching out to refugees can touch us in a very personal way: a man claiming asylum had had to be admitted to hospital for a serious medical procedure, and rang her shortly beforehand, to ask if he could name her as the next-of-kin. He had no-one near to hand when in such a vulnerable situation. Reaching out demands faith and courage, and defending rights becomes a very practical matter.

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l to r Fr Joe Ryan, Julie Ward MEP, Dr Patrick Riordan SJ, Nicolette Busuttil, JRS, Barbara Kentish

After a delicious lunch provided by St John Vianney parish caterers, participants chose from a variety of workshops on action for human rights by partner agencies: the Apostleship of the Sea, the Catholic Association for Racial Justice, the London Catholic Worker, Safe Passage, London Mining Network, Haringey Migrant Support Network and Taxpayers against Poverty, and Human Rights in a Brazilian community.

 

Remember the Calais Children! – Parliamentary Debate

YOU HAVE GIVEN MONEY, CLOTHES, FOOD, TOILETRIES, TO KEEP THE WOLF FROM THE DOOR FOR YOUNG PEOPLE IN CALAIS!  NOW LET YOUR MP KNOW HOW YOU HAVE HELPED, WHAT YOU THINK, AND WHAT YOU WANT DONE!

Remember the Calais Children!  – Parliamentary Debate

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Safe Passage, a lobbying group allied to Citizens UK, is urging as many as possible to write to their MPs, asking them to attend a Parliamentary debate on October 24th, about the specific issue of stranded young migrants in Calais.  It is known that the numbers run into 100s, and that they are being very roughly treated by French police, who are implementing a policy of not allowing a resurgence of the ‘Jungle’.   To abandon children to this treatment so near to home is a scandal, and UK immigration law is being flouted, as we do not honour the Dubs Amendment, which would allow any unaccompanied minor to enter, and the Dublin 3 Agreement, which would allow one to enter if he or she had family in the UK.

What’s the ASK?

Safe Passage asks as many as possible

a) to write to their MPs (helpful bullet points will follow, as well as being on their website), asking to meet  them and ask them to attend and speak at the debate on October 24th,   AND

b) to be part of the action at Westminster which starts at 12 noon, with a ‘World Citizens’ choir of activists and refugees, followed by lobbying, all before the debate itself.  

Justice and Peace will shortly publish suggested bullet points to go in your letter, (it’s suggested that this should not be an email, but a paper, even handwritten! letter, as this gets taken more seriously), but meanwhile try and plan a letter writing session with friends, to get a letter in the post arriving at Parliament by October 20th.

See website www.safepassage.org.uk