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Jun 4 31 tweets 6 min read
We are now working with 70 out of the 100 people that the Government have sent ‘Notices of Intent‘ saying that they will be sent to Rwanda. A 🧵on the situation:
They are all in detention centres and they are all very scared.
Every single one of these people has a devastating account of the horrors they have escaped from in their home countries. Be it war, torture or persecution, they are all difficult to hear.
The fact that our Government is putting them through the intense trauma of a deportation to another dangerous future is simply barbaric.
Be in no doubt that being deported is traumatic.
We have had a five day hunger strike and we’ve had numerous late night conversations with people who feel suicidal. One said “They can send my dead body to Rwanda, but I would rather die than go there”.
I spoke to a man who was tortured In Libya.
They broke his nose and his shoulder twice; he has scars on his back and stomach from being electrocuted. He said “Things like that can happen in Libya, there is no government and it is lawless. But I never expected to be put in prison in the UK for committing no crime.”
He said that when he was being tortured the one thing that kept him going was hope in the UK as being a place where fairness and equality exists.
Now, being told that the UK will forcibly deport him to a country that has been condemned for human rights violations smashes that hope to pieces.
Many of the men are worried about their families back home.
The reason they embarked on these incredibly dangerous journeys was that they saw it as the only way to find a future for their kids. I spoke to a man from Sudan who saw his younger brother and sister beaten to death in their village by armed militia.
He left his wife and unborn child in a refugee camp where they could live for many years if he did not find an alternate future for them.
His journey took two years and has left horrific scars, but now he is terrified he has let them down as, if he gets sent to Rwanda, he may never meet the child that was born after he left.
That people believe that the UK is a good place that will treat them fairly is something we should be proud of; that throughout the world the UK is a beacon of all that is good is an amazing reputation that we could now lose.
Many of the men are Syrian and the horrors of the Syrian war are well known. I spoke to several people who only left because they were conscripted to military service and did not want to kill others. The war in Syria is complex: there is no ‘right’ side.
They could end up fighting other Syrians. One man told me about his older brother being shot by a sniper as he walked down the road with his mother. They carried him to a hospital but he didn’t make it and bled to death. His mother was desolate and has never been the same since.
He is terrified of telling her he Is being sent to Rwanda. He doesn’t think she will recover.
Of the 70 people we are working with, 10 have had notices to say their deportation is imminent, and six specifically mention the 14 June.
Thankfully we have some amazing law firms working to challenge each of these removals.
Two of the boys say that they are just 16 years old. The Home Office say they are 23 and 26 so it is essential that proper age assessments are done before any deportation takes place.
Our lawyers will fight for that. One 16 year old saw his brother killed in front of him when his village was raided in Sudan. He escaped and went back later to find the whole village gone.
We estimate that over 70% of those with Rwanda notices have suffered torture or trafficking either in their home countries or on the incredibly dangerous journeys they have made.
As a result, many have serious physical and mental scars and are finding the intense stress of detention, coupled with the threat of being sent Rwanda, intolerable.
One man who endured extreme torture in Libya told me that every time the door to his room bangs shut it gives him flashbacks to being tortured in Libya. This makes him feel like he is going insane.
Such people should not be held in detention centres at all, and the fabulous law firms we are working with are busy challenging this on their behalf.
One of the men has a wife who has refugee status in the UK.
He has not seen her for three year and came to join her, and yet now our Government wants to send him to Rwanda.
We are told people are being sent to Rwanda because they have made dangerous crossings in small boats, but the selection does not bear this out.
More than a third of those we are talking to in detention are from Sudan, yet the vast majority of Sudanese refugees have no money to pay people smugglers or get in boats.
By contrast, we only have one Afghan refugee in our sample with a Rwanda notice – yet we are told that they make up 25% of those crossing in small boats.
The Rwanda plan is highly political. Could its selection process be more so?
The ‘logic’ to the Rwanda plan is that we take people who, by definition, have escaped from the very worst things in this world, who are so desperate they are willing to get in frightening and flimsy boats to cross the Channel, and present them with something that fills them…
…with even more terror in order to deter them from coming. Is this really what we as a civilised nation want to do?
And how does this use of Rwanda as a deterrent square with Patel’s claims that “the scheme will support the humane and respectful treatment of refugees”?
If it is bursting with respect, humanity and opportunity, how can it simultaneously be more terrifying than crossing the Channel in those tiny boats?
There is a more humane and civilised solution right in front of us now.
If we gave all refugees visas to cross the Channel, in the same way we do with Ukrainians, no one would need to risk their lives in small boats, and people smugglers would be put out of business overnight.
This must be possible – we are taking seven year’s worth of Channel refugees in our 200,000 Ukrainians.
For the last three weeks the Care4Calais access team and our fabulous refugee volunteers have been simply unbelievable working through days, nights and weekends to stay in touch with everyone, sort out paperwork, keep people up to date and reassure them.
We cannot thank them enough for their efforts. The work of this team is essential; more than ever given the Nationality and Borders Act. We are raising funds for a new caseworker and need all the help we can get.
Please donate now - no amount is too small to help bit.ly/c4caccess
For more ways to #StopRwanda go to care4calais.org/stop-rwanda/

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More from @Care4Calais

Jun 2
Right now things are really busy in Northern France. In Dunkirk more people have been asking us for food. There have been police evictions and so many people are in need of replacement tents and bedding. The shadow of the Rwanda scheme hangs over everyone, and we’re working Image
hard to hand out information leaflets.
And there are our usual daily distributions to do too. So far this week we’ve given out 83 tents, 279 summer jackets, 116 power banks, 55 phone cables, and 128 hygiene packs. Power banks are in big demand because the charging facilities at
some sites have been cut back. Phones are a lifeline to the outside world for refugees, so being able to charge is vital.
As there’s a big Bank Holiday weekend, you might think that we would be short of volunteers as people would be going on holiday, but actually the opposite is
Read 8 tweets
Jun 2
The UN refugee agency has said “a clear majority” of people arriving in the UK by small boats across the Channel should be considered to be refugees.
“Based on currently available Home Office data, UNHCR considers that a clear majority of those recently arriving to the United Kingdom by boat are likely to be refugees. Refugees and asylum seekers are not, and should not be described as, ‘migrants’,” the spokesperson said.
A new analysis of the government’s latest data shows that 77% of the men, women and children who come across the Channel in small boats are likely to be refugees and would accordingly be allowed to remain in the UK if their claims were assessed
Read 4 tweets
May 16
Today on a beach in the south coast, I met a man whose bravery tore my heart. We were welcoming a group of refugees who had been brought in by lifeboat, and I got talking to a man from Iran. He seemed fine, standing with his friend, smiling and chatting despite his long journey.
But then he told me how grateful he was to the lifeboat men. He tried to explain how good they had been, and to tell me about being in the boat — and then suddenly he fell quiet, unable to speak for a moment.

He crouched down and covered his face.
When his friend saw him, he covered his face too; another man standing nearby came over to hug him. They soon recovered, and continued acting with great dignity. Clearly pity was the last thing these men wanted; they sought only safety and the chance to rebuild their lives.
Read 9 tweets
May 15
URGENT – Boris has announced that 50 people will be sent to Rwanda imminently, and it is sure more will follow.

It is ESSENTIAL that anyone who cares about refugees now does all they can to stop this.

Here’s how you can help:
1. Share these refugee information leaflets as widely as possible: bit.ly/Rwnd1 and bit.ly/Rwnd1a

Share them with:
· Any refugees you know
· Anyone who works with refugees
· Any organisations who work with refugees
2. Donate to the crowdfunder for our legal challenge to the Rwanda scheme. We are raising funds to cover costs, and to protect us from Home Office costs if we don’t win: bit.ly/c4c-rwanda

3. Sign up for further updates on how you can #StopRwanda bit.ly/C4Cjoin
Read 5 tweets
May 8
Why are there more male than female refugees in northern France? A 🧵

Firstly, in the countries where they are from, such as Sudan, young men may be killed to stop them rebelling against the government or used as child soldiers.
In Afghanistan, young men are often primary targets for recruitment by radical groups like ISIS and the Taliban, and in Eritrea they can be conscripted for what is effectively a life sentence. For these reasons, boys as young as 13 have to run away from homes and families.
In Calais we see more women and children from countries such as Syria or Iran, but they are prioritised for social housing and not as often seen on the street.
Moreover, the journeys to Calais are incredibly harsh. From Africa they might cross the Sahara which takes many lives…
Read 7 tweets
May 6
Last month Sofia, nine years old, survived a suspected cluster bomb attack in the besieged city of Mykolaiv, which lodged shrapnel the size of a sugar cube in her brain.

Fragments from the blast shattered her skull, forcing a piece of hot metal around half an inch thick through
her forehead. The metal passed through the centre of her brain, and came to rest at the nape of her neck.

“It is a kind of miracle that she survived at all,” said Dr Mikhail Lovga, chief of the paediatric neurosurgery department at Mykolaiv hospital, who is treating her.
Sofia is a different child from the nine year old who just two months ago was regularly posting videos of her dancing on TikTok, and singing pop songs into her smartphone. Now she can barely walk, and struggles to compose her thoughts.

In the first weeks of the war, Sofia’s
Read 12 tweets

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