(Published in the Guardian Northerner on 25th June 2012)
Plea for elderly and disabled refugee from Eritrea will be put to the Home Office by MP and Bishop of Sheffield tomorrow.
People power in Sheffield has helped to delay
the planned rapid deportation of an elderly and disabled asylum seeker whose
future now hinges on a meeting tomorrow, Tuesday 26 June.Plea for elderly and disabled refugee from Eritrea will be put to the Home Office by MP and Bishop of Sheffield tomorrow.
Lemlem Hussein Abdu |
The Home Office has agreed to halt action
against Lemlem Hussein Abdu, 62, who was arrested last Tuesday when she visited
the UK Border Agency at Vulcan
House in Sheffield to begin a new asylum claim.
Lemlem originally sought asylum in the UK
in 2007 but was refused, and after her arrest last week she was taken straight
to Yarl's
Wood detention centre, ready for a flight to Ethiopia yesterday, Sunday
24 June. But a march and demonstration in Sheffield last week, addressed by
both the Labour MP for Sheffield Central, Paul Blomfield, and the city's
Liberal Democrat leader Shaffaq
Mohammed, was followed by a temporary official change of heart.
Home Office minister Damian Green
cancelled the Sunday flight and agreed to delay further action until after the meeting in London tomorrow with Blomfield and the Bishop
of Sheffield, Rt Rev Steven Croft. Blomfield says:
We will be highlighting the support that Lemlem has within Sheffield, and that her deportation would shame the UK.
Earlier he posted on the Lemlem Must Stay
Facebook group page:
I've written to Theresa May seeking an urgent meeting and calling on her to halt the deportation. I've pointed out the huge support for Lemlem in Sheffield and that the decision to remove an elderly, disabled woman to a country where she does not speak the language, where she has never lived and to which she has no affiliation is a gross error [and] will be quite rightly viewed by many as scandalous.
Last week's demonstration saw a procession to the UK Borders Agency at Vulcan House where a delegation met staff to put the case against the decision to deport Lemlem. A petition was also handed in, with over 1000 signatures asking for Lemlem to be given the right to remain in the UK.
The demonstration and interviews with Paul Blomfield and Gina Clayton. Filming and reporting by Marishka Van Steenbergen
A spokesperson for the agency said that the case had been considered carefully by the department and an immigration judge when Lemlem appealed against an original asylum refusal. He said:
Both concluded that this lady does not have grounds to remain in the United Kingdom. The UK has a proud tradition of providing protection to those who genuinely need it, but those individuals with no right to be here must leave and if they choose not to, we will remove them.
Sheffield's campaigners say that Lemlem,
who left her home country of Eritrea
in 1978, will be left destitute if she is sent to Ethiopia. She fled after her
family was murdered during an attack by Ethiopian forces. Allegedly targeted
due to their support for the Eritrean Liberation Front (ELF), which was
fighting for independence from Ethiopia.
Gina Clayton, trustee of Sheffield's City of Sanctuary
says:
Lemlem is absolutely terrified to the core of being taken to Ethiopia. She has no family and no connections in that culture and no physical ability to work. She doesn't speak the language and she probably would be reduced to begging. The chances are she would simply die of starvation.
There will be a vigil in London tomorrow
morning, supported by friends and supporters of Lemlem and faith leaders from
Sheffield.
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