Former prisons ombudsman Stephen Shaw’s independent review, “Review
into the Welfare of Vulnerable Persons,” urges the government to drastically
reduce the 3,000 people currently being detained and to ban outright the
detention of pregnant women.
He highlighted medical research which demonstrates how
immigration detention can damage the mental health of detainees, especially
when the detention period has no limit. The effectiveness of the policy was
also dismissed, as Shaw pointed to evidence suggesting that there is no
correlation between the number of people detained and the number lawfully
deported.
“There is too much detention; detention is not a
particularly effective means of ensuring that those with no right to remain do
in fact leave the UK; and many practices and processes associated with
detention are in urgent need of reform,” Shaw wrote. “Most of those currently
in detention do not represent a serious [or any] risk to the public, and many
represent a very low risk of noncompliance because of their strong domestic
links to the UK,” he added. Shaw suggested a combination of tagging, residence
and reporting restrictions, and voluntary returns be implemented instead.
Home Secretary Theresa May commissioned Shaw’s report into
the system following a Channel 4 documentary aired last March which exposed
abuses in Yarl’s Wood Immigration Removal Centre. A cross-party inquiry in
parliament called for an end to indefinite detention, but the Home Office has
yet to act.
Amnesty International UK described the treatment of
vulnerable people in detention as “shocking.”
“Most people wouldn’t know it, but the UK locks up thousands
in immigration detention, including rape victims, torture survivors and people
with serious mental illness. This can and frequently does have a terrible
impact on their mental health. In some cases the harm it does can be
catastrophic. The system destroys people’s lives, and is utterly unacceptable. It
is high time UK government ministers listened to the experts, who time and
again have warned of the terrible consequences of the UK’s excessive use of
detention.”
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