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Empowerment Advocacy Justice

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Panel Discussion: The Day-to-Day Reality of Hostile Environment Policies

18th March 2024 by ficheb

Join us and Divest Borders Leeds for a panel discussion event focused on the day-to-day reality of ‘hostile environment’ policies.

When: Wednesday the 20th of March – Arrive: 10.30am – Workshop: 11am-1pm

Where: Middle Floor, 23-25 Wharf Street, Leeds, LS2 7EQ

*Unfortunately, Middle Floor is not a wheelchair accessible venue

What: There will be a panel discussion followed by team workshopping activities based on the content of the discussion.

Grab your free Eventbrite tickets here!: https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/panel-discussion-understanding-the-hostile-environment-tickets-856065855017

You will be able to enter the event without a ticket, but purchasing a free ticket beforehand will allow us to better manage our numbers and prepare for the event. 

Meet our panellists:

  • Reem ElKosseer: 

I’m Reem, a fourth year business management and marketing student. I’m currently an international student here in the UK and a scholar at the University of Leeds. I spent most of my life growing up in Egypt and moved here just before accessing higher education, and I am still navigating the immigration system till this day. I have worked for different large corporates during my time living here, as well as smaller charities UK-based and internationally.

  • André Dallas: 

André Dallas is a Liverpool-based decolonial artist and activist of Afro-Jamaican descent whose work seeks to challenge the downpression of the Babylon systems which bound the ways we imagine the world and our place in it. Since organising with Rhodes Must Fall in Oxford, he has played a significant role in the development of People & Planet’s Divest Borders campaign, through which UK students are demanding that their universities sever ties with companies profiting from the persecution of migrating people.

  • Holly Mogford:

 I am a PhD student at Swansea University and Patients not Passports campaigner. My research is concerned with the function(s) and implications of immigration charging regimes which include visa, residency and citizenship fees, NHS (sur)charging, employer sanctions and landlord sanctions. The Patients not Passports campaign works towards ending immigration checks and charges in the NHS.

  • Daniel Vincent:

Daniel is providing a lived experience perspective of the ‘hostile environment’.

Why is it important to attend events like these?

Attending events like this means you are able to hear and engage with the lived experiences of those who are subject to and affected by the Hostile Environment Policies, and re-centres migrants in migration justice. In a country where the government and media repeatedly criminalise and make false, harmful representations of migrants to the British public, it is important to hear stories from migrants which counter and debunk harmful rhetorics. Furthermore, at panel events like this you are also able to hear from researchers and activists which can guide you into reflection and action on your own daily lives, and what you can do to contribute to migrant justice on a community and political level.

Filed Under: frontpage, frontslider, Our Activities, Uncategorized Tagged With: Divest Borders, Hostile environment, Migrant Action, migration justice

Celebrate International Women’s Day with Migrant Action and Eritrean Community Leeds & Surrounding Areas

5th March 2024 by ficheb

When: Friday 8th of March – 5-8pm – but feel free to come and go as you wish

Where: 29 Cromwell Mount, LS9 7GB 

This Friday, for International Women’s Day, we are collaborating with Eritrean Community Leeds & Surrounding Areas to deliver an event which celebrates migrant women and brings people together as a community. 

Food and soft drinks will be available, but feel free to bring along some snacks if you wish!

During this event, we will have a small talk focused on postnatal depression. We will be explaining what postnatal depression is, how it impacts migrant communities, where you can get help, and how you can help someone who you think may be struggling. The aim of this small talk is to help destigmatise postnatal depression – there will be no judgement in this space. 

Filed Under: frontpage, frontslider, Our Activities Tagged With: community engagement, International Women's Day, Migrant Action

Community Resilience: Reflections on our Preparing for the Illegal Migration Act Workshop

14th February 2024 by ficheb

By Fidelis Chebe and Georgia Hawthorne

On Tuesday the 6th of February, Migrant Action and Right To Remain co-hosted a workshop event discussing the Illegal Migration Act (IMA), how it is being enforced and how it is impacting our community. This event brought together a collective of different charities, organisations and individuals who are seeking to challenge the hostile effects of the IMA, and who support migrants within the local area. Events like these remind us of the importance of community, collective action and collective power. It is through coming together and collaborating that we can better address the unjust impacts of migration policies and support those who are vulnerable within our society.

A Note on Language: 

The Illegal Migration Act is problematic in its coding of human beings as legal or illegal. This following quote from Right To Remain details their difficulty with this term,

[The term “illegal”] is clearly dehumanising and apathetic to the experiences of people seeking sanctuary or a better life, whose journey to the United Kingdom (UK) was dictated by nothing more than an accident of birth. Second, it is factually incorrect. The act of migrating is not inherently illegal – not under entrenched principles of international law and policy. People move; we always have, and we always will. Third, it is grammatically incorrect. In any other arena, if an individual commits a crime, they do something illegal, they don’t become something illegal. In this way, our well-known belief that #NoOneIsIllegal has become increasingly poignant and urgent. [1]

What is the Illegal Migration Act?

In short, the IMA is a piece of legislation which aims to stop migration to the UK by irregular means: whether that’s small boat crossings, travelling clandestinely, or using false documents to arrive and remain in the UK. The Illegal Migration Bill passed into law in July 2023, thus becoming an Act, but not all sections of the Act have yet been enforced. 

In the workshop presentation, the Right to Remain legal education officer Leah Cowling, set out the legal technicalities of the Act. The presentation highlighted what parts of the Act have and have not been enforced, which sections are workable or unworkable, and the currently not-enforced lynchpin of the Act.  This Right To Remain blog explicitly unpacked the legal technicalities of the Act: link.

The IMA goes against the Refugee Convention of the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR) and is incompatible with both the European Convention Against Trafficking (ECAT) and the Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC). In the workshop discussion, it is acknowledged that deterrence is largely ineffective at stopping the flow of migration and rather, exacerbates the risk and danger of unsafe routes to the UK.  Also, the potential criminalisation of asylum would likely result in more poverty, destitution and vulnerability to exploitation, abuse and other forms of migrant injustice within the UK for precarious migrants with insecure/irregular migration status.  

See Right to Remains’ blog post that provides a good summary of this: Link.  These migrant vulnerabilities and injustices are confronted through Migrant Action’s advice and casework whereby we provide a range of support interventions with limited resources.

The Impact of the IMA on our Communities

Through a panel discussion and group tasks, we spent time examining the impact of the IMA on our communities. Key themes of fear, anxiety and distrust were voiced, with it being emphasised that such a hostile Act impacts everyone not just migrants. The increased pressure felt amongst volunteer groups seeking to fill gaps in current UK welfare provision was also noted, with the opacity and fluctuating nature of the Act making it difficult to keep up with, to understand, and to challenge in this sector. 

Main Takeaways

  • The importance of collaborative and a collective effort – we are stronger together.

The collective organising of campaigns allows for creativity and endurance in tackling social injustice and in supporting those who are vulnerable in our community. Connections between groups should be fostered and encouraged through more events like this workshop. 

  • It is time to ‘mainstream’ issues of migration (in)justice. 

We need to stop discussing and treating issues of migration injustice as niche problems that only impact a portion of our community. Issues facing many migrants in the UK – such as destitution and homelessness, mental health struggles, inaccessible healthcare – overlap with issues faced by all of us. Bridges need to be forged between migration charities and other sectors, in turn strengthening our potential power as a collective. 

  • More public education

Awareness and understanding of complex migration issues (legislation, policies, context and impact analyses etc) in order to prevent harmful narratives/practices and effective organising for positive change requires public education and community engagement.

Conclusion

Migrant Action is a rights and migrant justice organisation supporting vulnerable migrants including, but not limited to, people confronted by insecure and irregular immigration status. We anticipate that IMA will force more people into this category who will reach out for support from Migrant Action. In preparing for the Act as part of a wider network and support infrastructure, we will continue to develop learning and community organising partnerships with other organisations to strengthen public education and building capacity for system change. 

   

Filed Under: frontpage, frontslider, Our Activities, Uncategorized Tagged With: community engagement, community resilience, Hostile environment, Migrant Action

Migrant Action: 2023 Review!

26th January 2024 by ficheb

By Georgia Hawthorne, Volunteer

2023 was a huge year for Migrant Action, with lots of successes, collaborations and an expanding awareness of the essential work that we do.  There have also been some enduring challenges, with state hostility and austerity measures negatively impacting migrant communities and placing pressure on our resources and capacity as an organisation. Going forwards, we will continue to challenge systemic injustice, maintaining resilience within our organisation and the communities we support whilst driving forwards transformative social change.

Check out the complete report for more details:

Migrant-Action-2023-ReviewDownload

In 2024, we will continue advocating for migration justice, humane migration, and a liberating future for migrants. 

Filed Under: frontpage, frontslider, Our Activities Tagged With: community resilience, Migrant Action, migration justice

Preparing for the Illegal Migration Act: Workshop discussion with Right to Remain

19th January 2024 by ficheb

Join Migrant Action and Right to Remain for a workshop discussion and networking event focusing on the impact of the Illegal Migration Act on migrants and our communities.

Tuesday 6th of February – 12.30-3.30pm – Middle Floor, 23-25 Wharf St, Leeds, LS2 7EQ

The Illegal Migration Bill became law – and therefore an Act – on the 20th of July 2023. The stated aim of this Act is to prevent and deter ‘unlawful’ migration by those using unsafe routes. The Illegal Migration Act changes the law so that those who arrive in the UK illegally will not be able to stay here and will instead be detained and then be liable for removal.

Right to Remain and Migrant Action will be co-hosting a discussion in Leeds with the aim to enhance our understanding and prepare our communities for the impact of the Act. See the link below for more information and details on how to get tickets:

6th February 2024 Leeds: Preparing for the Illegal Migration Act – Right to Remain

The workshop offers a good networking opportunity to build links for future collaborations whilst strengthening our collective solidarity and resilience for migration justice.

You can either register directly using the link or email info@migrantaction.org.uk

Filed Under: frontpage, frontslider, Our Activities

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MIGRANT ACTION is a registered Charity. Charity Number: 1207941

Office address: Roundhay Resource Centre, 233-237 Roundhay Road, Harehills, Leeds LS8 4HS

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