100 days of shelter and a new expulsion 100 days of shelter and a new expulsion
Wednesday January 19 at 4:00 am, the Valais cantonal police came and arrested Ms. F. at his home near Zion. The woman had fled Kosovo in 2005 with his sick daughter to protect herself from her abusive husband. Despite medical attention, she had faced the death of his daughter in March 2010. Unfortunately, his son Boris * came from Kosovo in 2008 was attributed to the canton of Vaud, near Zion, and no one came to see her only rarely because it had no money to take the train. Very attached to his little sister, mother and son, however, continued to support each other. On Wednesday, Ms F had just returned from the hospital where she had past two weeks due to a serious health problem. She was returned to her apartment where she was followed by a nurse who helped him meet his basic needs (food, hygiene).
Boris stayed at the shelter for the Coordination Asylum in Lausanne for 6 weeks to escape the forced return of which the authorities threatened him. He too was ill and during this period, an application for review was submitted to federal authorities have granted early suspensive effect Dec. 1. This meant they did not expel the time to do additional medical examinations. Suddenly, this young man of 23 was taken out of the shelter and return structures for emergency assistance **. Followed medically, he began to hope that the township would allow family reunification with his mother, alone and in pain, awaiting restoration and regularization of their situation.
This morning, her life stops again. Her mother has had time to take a suitcase and was brought to the airport. Weakened after his long illness, she was forcibly taken by police and ended up in Pristina in the day. Reached by telephone his son Boris, she recounts being wounded in the leg and arm during the intervention.
Getting rid of unwanted persons
If we take care of local churches, c ' is just for us stand against such practices that we believe are contrary to human rights. Many people have been deported as they tried to rebuild a life after a difficult journey. Many came out of the hospital, or were undergoing medical treatment. Moreover, the last person who died during his forced return was leaving a hunger strike and died on the tarmac of the airport of Kloten in March 2010.
The deportation machine has neither eye nor ear. This is to make the figure. The new laws have established criteria to qualify for asylum who deny the reality of migrants. These cures have built a wall of inadmissibility faced by the applicant for asylum-es.
This is to sort the wheat from the chaff, to suspect rather than helping. Whether it is for disability pensions or the unemployed, the laws assume that some people abuse and another game is "authentically" in his right to be helped.
These processes have the effect of dividing people, between good and others who deserve that abuse. This is the populist and Manichaean is meant more in the institutional parties and the media. Every day we see how these policies are absurd and arbitrary. Instead of letting people live normally, they are locked and control, costing huge amounts of money, while most of these people could be autonomous.
Equal rights for everyone
Our movement that demands equal rights for everyone, whatever the color of their passport, which is a grain of sand in this huge machine to expel (expel from our work, our apartment, our rights, and the country where you live).
We first ask a regularization that will let people live in peace, without permanent guardianship of a State that controls and threatening, arresting and holding, which destroys the lives of thousands of people. As in the old dictatorships, should we expect that people set themselves on fire so that the authorities come to their senses?
* First Loan
** In the center of Vennes, emergency assistance is a bed, a wardrobe, a sandwich for lunch and an evening meal. The unsuccessful applicants have no right to work, or receive money (charity). They have no identity but a white paper without pictures they must submit to the authorities every two weeks. They have the right to go to the PMU for minimal care.