RAPAR
  • HOME
    • OUR WORK
    • WHO WE ARE
    • HOW TO HELP >
      • Friends of RAPAR
    • CONTACT US
  • CAMPAIGNS
    • Campaigning groups
    • Homeless not Heartless
    • ROAR
    • Seeking Safety
    • GRIPP UK
    • SERCO must go
    • Status Now 4 All
    • There's No Such Thing As 'Voluntary' Returns!
  • RESEARCH
    • RAPAR's research team
  • Casework
  • COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT
    • Reclaim the Stage
    • Invisible Borders in the UK
    • Incredible Week for the Banks
    • Sad Reality
    • Cats on the Run
  • NEWS & PRESS
    • RAPAR updates
    • PRESS RELEASES
    • Cassandra who never gives up!

We Need Nestor - Call to Solidarity Vigil

18/7/2018

0 Comments

 
VERY URGENT 
CALL TO SOLIDARITY VIGIL 

between 9 and 10am tomorrow morning, ​
19th July 2018 
Outside Dallas Court 
SALFORD, M50 2GF 


The Home Office have rejected Nestor's application and told him to present at Dallas Court tomorrow morning.  David and Branwen McHugh, longstanding members of the Central Manchester Quaker Meeting who worked with Nestor for several years on the boaz trust​ winter nightshelter project for destitute men write as follows: 


"When Nestor first came to this country 11 years ago, there was an expectation that asylum seekers would show a commitment to their community, which he has obviously accepted and demonstrated. Such involvement inevitably leads to social and emotional attachments being formed. It seems that during this time he also had grounds for believing that his asylum claim might be successful and he would be allowed to stay here permanently, as he tells us that at one stage he was entitled to obtain a Visa, when historical applications or excepted for a limited period, but unfortunately the solicitor acting for him missed the deadline. A subsequent appeal appeal against the decision was then considered separately from his 'legacy papers' and refused. We feel strongly that after this length of time not only should Nestor be allowed to continue with the life he has established here but that he has proved that he would be an asset as a resident of the UK."

Please come and show your solidarity with Nestor. Please send messages of support to admin(a)rapar.org.uk
0 Comments

Refugee Caught Up In "Whirlpool" of Home Office Bureaucracy At Risk of Removal From the UK

18/7/2018

0 Comments

 
A Guinean man who has made his home in Manchester for the last 12 years has been caught up in a Home Office "whirlpool" of bureaucracy.

Nestor Sylla, who is vice-chair of RAPAR and is involved with other charitable organisations in the city, came to Europe at the age of 26 looking for his mother after the death of his father and the murder of his sister in Guinea.

Nestor did not find his mother but discovered new friends in Manchester who are now his family. He met Quaker Elizabeth Coleman through a hosting scheme for people who have come to the UK seeking asylum and have ended up destitute and homeless. Later, he helped Elizabeth and others run the Boaz Trust winter night shelter based at the Friends' Meeting House in Manchester.

Elizabeth, who is retired, said: “Nestor's home is England. He is like a son to me and has a lot to contribute to our society.” When Elizabeth was ill, Nestor visited her in hospital and was a vital carer for her when she was discharged.

Nestor also supports another friend and her five children, helping with homework, taking them to school and the dentist, and attending parents' evenings. He says: “All these people are now my only family.”

Nestor arrived in Europe looking for his mother, a French citizen who left the family home after the death of his father. His travel was paid for by a woman who said she was a friend of his mother's and a passport for him was arranged.

When he came to the UK, Nestor went to the job centre to find work and showed them his passport. He was accused of having a false travel document and was arrested and imprisoned in Strangeways but was cleared of the charge and released.

Nestor was advised to apply for asylum and his case was being considered under the old Legacy system but his immigration solicitor missed a Home Office deadline. His complaint against the solicitor was upheld.

Last year, Nestor was unlawfully detained at Brook House Immigration Removal Centre at Gatwick Airport – which featured in a BBC Panorama investigation and led to 10 members of staff being suspended.

He was detained despite having submitted a Further Leave to Remain application and having proof of postage and delivery. When his solicitor applied for bail, the Home Office misled the judge saying a decision would be made on the case by July 21st 2017 and, because of this assurance, Nestor remained in detention at Brook House. He was finally released the following month after it became apparent that the Home Office had not even looked at the application.

Earlier this year, the Home Office wrote to Nestor rejecting his application because they said he had used the wrong form. He enlisted the support of his MP Lucy Powell to show that the correct form had been used. The Home Office then claimed they had not received an application, despite the fact that they had also written to Nestor advising him that his fee waiver application, which is included in the Leave to Remain application, had been accepted. RAPAR asked how the Home Office had rejected a Leave to Remain application and accepted a fee waiver request on a document they claimed not to have received.

One solicitor has described the Home Office as having Nestor in a “whirlpool” of bureaucracy. RAPAR believes there are many queries over this case which have not been answered satisfactorily. Last week, the Home Office rejected Nestor's Leave to Remain application and have said he must now leave the UK or risk detention and removal.

“Nestor has been unjustly treated and unlawfully detained. The Home Office has made numerous errors and is not answering an important request for information,” Elizabeth says.

A RAPAR spokesperson said: “Nestor is a refugee who came to this country when his life had been threatened and he had lost his immediate family. On arrival in the UK, he was wrongfully criminalised and remanded in prison for several months. Yet, despite all this, he has led an exemplary life volunteering for organisations like the Red Cross and Mustard Tree, as well as RAPAR and the Boaz night shelter. He has helped care for Elizabeth and the children of his friend Marie and all these people are now his family.

“In their refusal letter, the Home Office says Nestor can go back to Guinea – where his life was at risk and his sister was murdered – and suggests that people whose immigration status is 'precarious' should not be making close personal relationships in the UK.​

“Is it the Home Office's position that people who have fled death threats, torture and persecution should be making preparations to return to their home country while they are seeking asylum and safety in the UK? That I have cared for people while living here? Does the Home Office expect that a person can spend 12 years in a country and not form attachments to others and they form attachments to me?”
0 Comments

WATCH: RAPAR's Rhetta Moran speaking at the anti Trump rally in Manchester

14/7/2018

0 Comments

 
Video by Mark Krantz for Stand Up To Racism
Yesterday, demonstrations were held in cities up and down the country in protest against Donald Trump's visit to the UK.
At the Manchester rally, RAPAR's Rhetta Moran spoke out against Trump and his policies.
Moran highlighted the systematic abuse faced by migrants in the UK.
0 Comments

Disability Murals Remembers Kamil Ahmad

3/7/2018

0 Comments

 
THE METRO - Rebecca Yeo: "Before he was murdered, here is what a disabled asylum seeker had to say about Britain’s ‘hostile environment’" >>>
THE GUARDIAN - Steven Morris : "Memorial to murdered refugees unveiled in Bristol " >>>
Picture
[Image: Andrew Dunne - University of Bath]
Human rights campaigners in Bristol pay tribute to Kamil Ahmad who was brutally murdered after suffering racist abuse.

Ahmad was one of the participants of the Disability Mural that brought to light the struggles faced by disabled asylum seekers, amongst them, RAPAR members Manjeet Kaur and Mary Adenugba.

Now the mural will grace the walls of Bristol City Hall in remembrance of both Kamil Ahmad and Bijan Ebrahimi who were both murdered in brutal racist attacks.

“By putting the artwork on the walls of City Hall I hope it sends a message that their lives mattered.” - Marvin Rees, Mayor of Bistol
Picture
RAPAR member, Manjeet Kaur, who also participated in the mural, attended the memorial [Image: Andrew Dunne - University of Bath]
Both the case of Ahmad and Ebrahimi showed that though both had been the victims of serious racist abuse,  deep systematic failings and institutional racism meant that the authorities failed to protect both Kamil and Bijan resulting in their murders.  
Picture
Participants at the mural's unveiling in the Bristol Bear Pit, 2012. Among them; Kamil Ahmad, Manjeet Kaur & Mary Adenugba
Learn about the Bristol Disability Mural here >>>
0 Comments
    RAPAR
    NEWS
    Return to homepage

    Archives

    April 2024
    November 2023
    October 2023
    July 2023
    June 2023
    May 2023
    April 2023
    January 2023
    December 2022
    November 2022
    October 2022
    March 2022
    November 2021
    September 2021
    August 2021
    June 2021
    January 2021
    December 2020
    November 2020
    October 2020
    September 2020
    August 2020
    July 2020
    June 2020
    May 2020
    April 2020
    March 2020
    December 2019
    November 2019
    October 2019
    September 2019
    August 2019
    July 2019
    February 2019
    January 2019
    December 2018
    November 2018
    August 2018
    July 2018
    June 2018
    March 2018
    February 2018
    January 2018
    October 2017

    Categories

    All
    Activities
    Afghanistan
    Africa
    America
    Anti Racism
    Art
    Arts Activism
    Black Lives Matter
    Bristol
    Calais
    Cameroon
    Campaigns
    Climate Change
    Colonialism
    Community Development
    Congo
    COVID19
    Dallas Court
    Deportation
    Destitution
    Detention
    Dictatorship
    Disability Murals
    Education
    Environmental Refugees
    Events
    Football
    Fracking
    G4S
    Government & Policy
    Home Office
    Homophobia
    Hostile Environment
    Housing
    Immigration Law
    Ireland
    Jamaica
    LGBT+
    Manchester
    Medical Professionals
    Members
    NHS
    Obituary
    Pakistan
    Police
    Racism
    Research
    Rusholme
    Serco
    Sierra Leone
    Sudan
    Trade Unions
    Trump
    Uganda
    Voluntary Returns
    Volunteers
    War
    Whalley Range
    World Reports

    RSS Feed

Proudly powered by Weebly
  • HOME
    • OUR WORK
    • WHO WE ARE
    • HOW TO HELP >
      • Friends of RAPAR
    • CONTACT US
  • CAMPAIGNS
    • Campaigning groups
    • Homeless not Heartless
    • ROAR
    • Seeking Safety
    • GRIPP UK
    • SERCO must go
    • Status Now 4 All
    • There's No Such Thing As 'Voluntary' Returns!
  • RESEARCH
    • RAPAR's research team
  • Casework
  • COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT
    • Reclaim the Stage
    • Invisible Borders in the UK
    • Incredible Week for the Banks
    • Sad Reality
    • Cats on the Run
  • NEWS & PRESS
    • RAPAR updates
    • PRESS RELEASES
    • Cassandra who never gives up!