Listen

Disabled refugees and allies have protested outside the Home Office at the “inhuman” treatment that disabled people seeking asylum receive from private sector companies paid to provide their accommodation.

The protest called for an end to the “obscene profits” made by the companies, and for the contracts to be handed to local authorities, so the services can be run on a non-profit basis.

Disabled allies who helped organise the protest warned that one of the companies – the outsourcing giant Serco – will soon be carrying out disability benefit assessments in the south-west of England on behalf of the Department for Work and Pensions.

Aida (pictured), a member of the Manchester-based human rights organisation RAPAR, told the protest that her Serco housing is “miserable” and plagued by rats and insects.

She said: “[Serco] are being paid a lot of money and get to ride around in their fancy cars, while we are being treated terribly.”

She said the way she had been treated by the Home Office since arriving in the UK had caused her impairment, and she added: “The way Serco treats us lacks so much respect. It’s inhuman.”

One Serco staff member barged into a female friend’s room without knocking when she had just come out of the shower, she said.

Another protester, Mariatu, who also lives in Serco housing, said: “Asylum-seekers have no dignity, they have no choice because we are not [seen as] human.

“They treat us like we are inhuman, especially when you are disabled.”

Sami, who has lived in Home Office accommodation provided and managed by another Home Office contractor, Clearsprings Ready Homes, spoke of how residents have to plead for toilet paper and toothbrushes, and how staff sometimes do not arrive to help when an emergency button is pressed.

He said disabled people living in Clearsprings properties stay silent about their treatment because they are “afraid” that speaking out will harm their asylum cases.

DNS has previously reported how more than 50 disabled people seeking asylum have been living in “cramped, unsafe conditions, without adequate food or care” in Clearsprings accommodation in Essex.

Nanou Thassinda, a volunteer at Migrants Organise, said: “Clearsprings has been profiting from our misery, providing unsafe, undignified and inadequate accommodation for people seeking asylum.

“These places aren’t a home or a hotel. These places are detention hotels and an open-door prison.

“It’s time for the government to return the contract to the local authorities to provide asylum accommodation on a non-profit basis.”

The protesters attempted to deliver a letter about the “cramped, unsafe conditions” at the accommodation provided by Clearsprings in Essex, but Home Office staff refused to accept it.

The letter says that disabled people are experiencing “horrific and unnecessary suffering”, and it pleads with the Home Office “to intervene to provide decent conditions”.

It points out that Clearsprings made £62.5 million profit on its Home Office contracts last year, an increase on the £28 million it made the previous year.

Friday’s protest was organised by disabled people’s and migrant justice organisations including the Disability and Migration Network.

Rebecca Yeo, from Disabled People Against Cuts, an activist and academic on disability and migration, and one of the organisers, told the protest: “The restrictions put on people in the asylum system are actively designed to prevent people from meeting physical and emotional needs.

“The asylum system is deliberately disabling.

“Some people arrive in the UK as disabled people, other people become disabled as a result of the deprivation in the asylum system.”

Bethany Bale, from Disability Rights UK, said the protest had highlighted the “horrific” standards of accommodation and the “disregard for life” and “abhorrent disrespect” faced by disabled people seeking asylum who were staying in Serco and Clearsprings accommodation.

She said this treatment was “completely immoral and unacceptable”.

Rensa Gaunt, from Inclusion London, compared the provision of asylum accommodation to the benefits assessment system.

She told the protest: “It’s the same system that keeps all of us down. We need to keep it out of the hands of private companies.

“Your fight is our fight.”

She told DNS later that both systems were profit-making schemes, and that handing Serco the benefits assessment contract was a “huge safeguarding risk”, because of its track record in delivering Home Office contracts.

Svetlana Kotova, director of campaigns and justice at Inclusion London, had said earlier: “Disabled asylum-seekers must be treated with dignity. This not only includes a safe and accessible place to live, but also appropriate care and support, so people can do basic everyday things.

“We are calling on the Home Office to respect the basic human rights of disabled asylum-seekers.”

A Serco spokesperson said the company did not accept accusations that it was providing inadequate housing and support to disabled people seeking asylum; or that the accommodation was miserable and run down; or that its accommodation was overcrowded, with people treated in an inhuman way.

He said: “Serco provides accommodation for asylum seekers on behalf of the Home Office in two of the six regions of the UK and all the accommodation we provide is regularly inspected and complies with the terms of our contract with the Home Office and with all appropriate housing standards.

“Our teams are committed to supporting the asylum seekers accommodated by Serco with compassion, dignity and respect. Their safety and wellbeing is always our top priority.”

He said he could not comment on the claims that some accommodation was overrun with insects and rats, that people had acquired impairments because of the conditions they experience in the UK, or that a Serco staff member had entered a woman’s room without knocking, because DNS was unable to provide further details.

But he added: “Our housing officers are highly professional individuals.

“An appointment will always be made, and our processes and procedures do not permit entry to a resident’s room without knocking.”

Clearsprings declined to comment on the protest and referred DNS to the Home Office.

The Home Office said that asylum accommodation providers are contractually obliged to ensure that accommodation is accessible and complies with the Human Rights Act and the Equality Act, while asylum-seekers who have problems with their accommodation can contact the charity Migrant Help.

It does not accept hand-delivered letters.

A Home Office spokesperson said: “We are committed to ensuring the safety and wellbeing of those in receipt of asylum support and have extra provisions in place for people with disabilities.

“Asylum accommodation providers are contractually obliged to ensure accommodation is accessible for disabled people and where concerns are raised, we work with providers to ensure they are addressed.”

  • cheese_greater@lemmy.world
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    4
    arrow-down
    8
    ·
    edit-2
    11 months ago

    I don’t see that happening, altho I agree we should just generally take care of people UBI style. But until the native population receives such gurantees, I’m not ok with certain classes of people having preferential and expedited access at the expense of everyone else who pays for and suffers for lack of such treatment

    Edit: also please do not swear at me if you’d like me to engage with you in good faith. I will remove mine (that didn’t curse at anyone) to be balanced but nobody’s going to sit with you if you’re going to be abusive at/towards someone. I get we all swear but it feels lile your words are abusive in tenor and I won’t be replying further if it continues.

    • Micromot@feddit.de
      link
      fedilink
      arrow-up
      5
      ·
      11 months ago

      You should rather focus on the rich part of the population who gets all of this stuff without doing any work while their whole life was great.

      Refugees usually had some kind of trouble in their lives that rich people never had.

      I’m fine with people who need help getting help while I don’t get that help yet.

      The rich part of the population wants everyone else to believe that it’s the fault of the minorities instead of themselves because they rarely pay taxes or help out

      • cheese_greater@lemmy.world
        link
        fedilink
        arrow-up
        1
        arrow-down
        2
        ·
        edit-2
        11 months ago

        The rich weaponize it regardless and focusing on them doesn’t matter because thats everyone elected. They’re not gonna spite themselves to do the right thing. How are the Refugees being hurt, they simply need to follow the process. Why is that such a problem for them but totes cool for the rest of us?

        Just because we live in a “safe” country or the West in general doesn’t mean we’ve all lived better or suffered less than Refugees. A rich person in a position of powet who did shitty things while in power becomes a refugee when there’s a revolution, even if they’re rich. Do they really deserve superior treatment cuz they’re temporarily stateless+embarassed citizens?

        • Micromot@feddit.de
          link
          fedilink
          arrow-up
          2
          ·
          edit-2
          11 months ago

          In america you can’t choose anything else than supporting the rich with your vote, no matter if you vote for rep or dem. If people move from their country there is usually a reason and that was what I was referencing with my prior comment.

          IIRC the process is also heavily flawed but I might have to look that up again, am not from america.

          The rich person also doesn’t have to be in a position of power, they just pay the ones that are to do things in their favor.

          When people migrate into a country they deserve enough support to make them be able to live their lives, same for people that were born in the country.

          The issue is not that the refugees get too much support, the issue is that people who have been born in the country don’t get support when they have problems

          • cheese_greater@lemmy.world
            link
            fedilink
            arrow-up
            1
            arrow-down
            1
            ·
            11 months ago

            The issue is not that the refugees get too much support, the issue is that people who have been born in the country don’t get support when they have problems

            For all intents and purposes, this is fair. But when you fail to provide the same necessaries or nice things to them and fail to be consistent with your own population, it strengthens populists who wanna burn the whole thing down no matter who it hurts.

            Also, there is a severe lack of vetting and enforcing sureties on refugees and that needs to change, toute suite. Ali Ibrahim or whatever the fuck his stupid name is should never have been granted entry, let alone allowed to prowl parks and the woods looking for schoolgirls to rape and murder. That happened and the fault lies in whoever let him in and whoever didn’t ensure he was babysat while we figured out his deal.

    • Emerald@lemmy.world
      link
      fedilink
      arrow-up
      2
      ·
      edit-2
      11 months ago

      Don’t focus on what someone has and you don’t. Instead question why they get that thing while you need it as well. You should want good things for everyone, not wanting to take good things from others just because you don’t get them.

      • cheese_greater@lemmy.world
        link
        fedilink
        arrow-up
        2
        ·
        11 months ago

        Actually a good point! Like use it as a doorstop to force that conversation and action on the matter. Touché

        I’ve just been upset about that Ali Ibrahim case and what that represents to the average, struggling Canadian