Trailer for Hamedullah: The Road Home
The National Coalition of
Anti-Deportation Campaigns (NCDAC), who will host the free event this
Tuesday 24 July at 93 Feet East on
Brick Lane in East London, laments the decision not to bring a charge of
corporate manslaughter on the private security firm and believes that
accountability for the insitutionalised abuse of those seeking sanctuary in the
UK seems further away than ever.
Lisa Matthews of NCDAC said, “This incident is just one of many examples of
the detention and deportation machines being used to silence the voice of
migrants, divide communities and try and make us forget that asylum seekers and
other migrants are individuals with human stories to tell.”
Outside an Immigration Removal Centre |
NCDAC will screen two documentaries; Hamedullah: The Road Home and How Long is Indefinite?,
which both claim to highlight injustices of the asylum and immigration systems.
The screenings will be followed by a panel discussion with the directors of
the documentaries, young people from Afghanistan, ex-detainees, Lisa Matthews
of NCDAC and Kate Blagojevic of Detention
Action.
UK film director and screenwriter Sue Clayton filmed
Hamedullah and his friends up to the day he was deported. Clayton gave
Hamedullah a small video camera when he was deported, hoping to find out
whether he would survive in Afghanistan.
Hamedullah in Afghanistan |
Clayton has made over 20 award-winning films for BBC and
Channel 4, including The
Disappearance of Finbar with Jonathan Rhys Meyers. “A lot of my films are
about people who go on journeys, and what people are looking for in their lives
and how they change. Are they running to something or from something and who do
they become when they go on a journey?
“I thought about these unaccompanied children; who do they
grow up to be, do they feel Afghan, do they feel British? So my real
inspiration wasn’t even the political side at first, it was more about how you
put your identity together every morning, what makes you you, is it your
friends, your music, do you really cling onto your family and your past or do
you have to let that go? So it was a sort of emotional interest in how they
keep themselves going, because a lot of them are very positive, so how do they
face each day with all that difficulty behind them?”
How
Long is Indefinite?, directed and produced by Alexis L Wood, claims to be the
first documentary to expose detention without a time limit being exercised on
thousands of immigrants in Britain every day.
Reconstruction of a detention centre from How Long Is Indefinite? |
The
film follows the lives of three people caught in immigration limbo and detained
for almost four years between them. They cannot be removed from the UK, yet
they remain detained in prison at an average cost of £40,150
each, per year to the taxpayer.
Wood,
assistant producer at DocHouse in
London, said she made this documentary because she wanted to represent the main
issues leading to detainees caught in detention limbo.
Aissata, one of the characters in How Long Is Indefinite? |
“I
made a film for people to actually see the faces, the families and the lives of
people detained which is so easy to forget when we are given statistics of
people removed, told that they are illegal and without rights. In fact the case
is not so simple and many are never removed from the country but held in
detention indefinitely.
“The
longest case we know about is someone being detained for 8 years. Many are held
for several years wondering each day if they will ever be released or be
removed to a regime in which they fear for their lives. I want my
film to make people empathise with the people in this situation and realise
that it is happening to thousands of people every day.”
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