New
JRS report launched at EU Parliament
Brussels, 20 December 2011 – At the EU Parliament,
JRS Europe launched their new report
From
Deprivation to Liberty at an event which included MEPs and representatives from the Belgian
Immigration
Office and NGOs.
The
report, which is based on interviews with migrants
participating in alternatives-to-detention
programmes in the United Kingdom, Belgium and
Germany, concludes that detaining migrants is
unnecessary because more humane non-custodial
alternatives exist.
‘‘None
of the alternatives to detention we looked into are
inherently harmful. They exemplify steps – albeit
small steps – towards the normalisation of
engagement over enforcement’’, said Philip Amaral of
JRS Europe.
‘‘The
biggest problems we observed relate to the larger
systems of migration and asylum. On a whole, these
are systems based on assumptions about likely
migrant behaviours rather than empirical evidence.
Geert
Verbauwhede of the Belgian Immigration Office
acknowledged that the current Belgian system is
still in its infancy but was appreciative of the JRS
recommendations. ‘‘Our system is still growing, we
are only existing three years but we will take the
JRS report on board’’, he said.
He
condemned the type of lawyers mentioned in the
report who charge asylum seekers large fees yet
provide them with little help. ‘‘Legal assistance is
not always of the same quality... some lawyers see
it as a cash cow. If we see this, we will complain
to the board of lawyers but we have no influence
here’’.
He also
admitted that there is not enough information
provided to those arriving at the border. ‘’It is
clear that we have to give them direct information
at the time’’, he said.
Antonio
Masip Hidalgo MEP, claimed that the biggest problems
with adopting a new Reception Conditions Directive
lie with member states in the Council. Even those
that are the most engaged in the debate, and the
most supportive, face difficulties with the
compromise.
He said
that there is a need to go straight to the member
states, i.e. in Brussels, their embassies, permanent
representations, in order to persuade them to accept
compromises that include alternatives to detention.
The
Danish Presidency of the EU (Jan-July 2012),
however, will be a critical moment for the Reception
Conditions Directive. This period will be a good
chance to adopt a directive with higher protection
standards, he stated.
Contact information:
Philip Amaral, advocacy officer
europe.advocacy@jrs.net
+32 2 250 32 23