He really can't cope can he? The list of high-level screw-ups by David Cameron, the man claiming to be Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, has lengthened even further beyond those listed by Ed Miliband at the Labour Conference. Now Calamity Cameron strikes again, as he appears to be doing every week, with alarming regularity.
Over a year ago, I wrote in these pages how I didn't think Cameron was Prime Minister and events have proved me right. This is a man who, like the previous Tory Prime Minister, is in office but not in power. His latest wizzard wheeze; arresting the leaders of gangs in order to cut gang-related crime, has actually resulted in an increase in gang-related crime to the extent that primary school children are now being drawn into gangs in far greater numbers. Typical politician, he knew better than the experts...
Indeed I cannot remember any previous Prime Minister ever making such a fool of him- or herself on such a regular basis. One suspects that even Mr Bean would not have made such a huge number of glaring errors.
Of course, the more Cameron looks out of touch and out of control of the country the reverse can be said of Ed Miliband. On Leveson, energy prices, "plebgate" and a host of other issues he has clearly been pulling Cameron's strings, in fact he is starting to look almost as though he is in power despite not yet being in office.
The only thing that has saved Calamity Cameron from looking like Mr Bean to the bulk of the population is the sycophantic media. For example; the way the BBC almost entirely failed to report on the NHS bill as it went through parliament, has shown that the media is having to work overtime in terms of presenting him as competent, to the extent that it had to avoid reporting on one of his most important, controversial and costly policies. The media blackout on the collapse of Virgin Healthcare, one of the major pillars of cameron's NHS privatisation drive, has served only to illustrate this further.
One suspects that, had the media not also reported the fact that he kept from the Leveson inquiry a whole load of emails between him and Brooks and Coulson, now on trial for media offences, he would have started to look, not just ridiculous but more like one of those burglars who leaves the scene of a crime dropping his calling card everywhere. As we head towards the first ever triple dip recession, the only person looking less in control of events is his chum George Osborne. Nice one Dave, you're doing marginally better than the man who got roundly booed at an Olympic ceremony.
Normally us British have the consolation that, however bad our Prime Minister gets, at least he/she will be better than the US President. This is almost a cornerstone of the "special relationship". Since 2010 this has quite obviously not been the case, and, unless Americans are stupid enough to elect Mitt Romney next month Cameron will continue to be the junior partner, in terms of intellect, ability and credibility. Having effectively isolated Britain in the EU, with all crucial decisions now being taken by France and Germany, the UK is now also increasingly buffetted and blown about like a dinghy in an ocean storm. We are truly a rudderless country at the mercy of powerful international forces which the government is unable to influence, let alone control
So, as farce turns to fiasco, on an almost daily basis, it is time the media stopped covering for him. He is simply not worth it.
They won't of course, the media, run by wealthy right-wing vested interests, needs Cameron in place to keep Labour out, to keep Labour from instigating sensible economic and social policies. They need to keep labour from putting in place policies that will work against that tiny group of people who run the media and the large corporations. This is the real political establishment, the ultra-right-wing political and economic oligarchs who need to prevent a government from being elected which will end their highly profitable kleptocracy.
Just like John Major, they benefit from having a Tory prime minister who is in office but not in power, one that enables them to get on with the business of ripping off the 99%. The last thing they want is a government which makes the economy work for the whole population.
So this one will do fine as far as they are concerned, even one as incompetent as this one.
Saturday, 27 October 2012
Wednesday, 19 September 2012
PRESS RELEASE: Refugee Board resumes controversial case involving transgender human rights activist.
My translation of a Press Release from T Refugee Project in Denmark
Following
protests from asylum activists, human rights organisations and researchers, the
refugee board has just suspended the deportation of Fernanda Milan. "This
is only half the battle," says the asylum initiative, T-Refugee Project.
Activists nerves
in the T-Refugee Project were raw all last week. And not without reason.
According to the authorities Fernanda Milán should have been deported to
Guatemala on Monday, 17 September. Fernanda and T-Refugee Project fear that expulsion
will result in Fernandas death.
In the last
month the group has therefore been working hard to overturn the decision, but
it was not until the last minute that the news came: the Refugee Board has decided
to reopen the case and her expulsion is put temporarily on hold while the case is
dealt with over the next few months.
Among the
activists in T-Refugee Project, there was great joy when the news came in..
They were in a meeting in Copenhagen on Monday afternoon to talk about the
legal options and Fernanda's safety in Guatemala after the expulsion.
There is no
reception program in Guatemala for deported people, according senior researcher
at DIIS, Ninna Nyberg Sørensen, when they arrive at the airport they just end
up on the street. This would be certain death for Fernanda when the date of her
deportation had been known and there are people who want her dead.
Until news
of the decision came, it was a 'worst case scenario' that was being discussed:
“How could a rescue plan be implemented in Guatemala, so she is transported from
the airport to a safe and secret place how to ensure that she has enough money
to live in hiding in Guatemala, etc."
Lisa Rasmussen
from T-Refugee Project started the meeting:
"Now I
do not know if we have to hold this meeting. We are not under the same time pressure
now. If the Refugee Board is to examine the case over the next few months, we have more
time to find out what legal options we have, if she is again refused asylum.
"
The T-Refugee
Project met on Monday at 4.00pm to discuss Fernanda's situation. On Friday night
they were already aware that the expulsion on Monday would probably be delayed
at least a few days because there was no police caseworker for the expulsion
when they contacted the police to point out that there was a request for
resumption of the case in the Refugee Board.
According to
Stine Larsen it should be seen as an admission that refusal to grant asylum
amounted to an error:
"When The
Refugee Board chooses to reopen this case, it shows that we were right. We were
right in that Fernanda is personally persecuted in Guatemala. We know that
Fernanda is in danger in Guatemala because she is transgender and human rights
activist. She is a familiar face and a model for other transgender people
because she talks about their issues, because she is a fighter. So it goes
without saying that there are people who want her dead. She is a political
refugee. It is 100% safe, the threats and the attacks against her in Guatemala
are politically motivated."
Asylum
activists from the T-Refugee Project believe that the Refugee Board's handling of this
issue has been very unusual. Emil Cronjäger explains:
"The Refugee
Board recognizes that Fernanda is in danger in Guatemala. The problem is that
they only believe she is in general danger and that they do not believe that
the attacks are politically motivated. Therefore they refused asylum in the
first instance.”
Stine Larsen
adds:
"We have a really problematic asylum system in Denmark. Asylum
rules have been tightened so hard that asylum seekers must prove that they are individually
persecuted. How do you prove it? How do you prove that people want to kill you
specifically and not just in general? "She asks rhetorically.
"The
truth is that trans people in Guatemala are killed. So whether Fernanda was
human rights activist or not, Denmark should recognize her as a refugee."
For Fernanda
Milán herself, her spirits are obviously high: "This is half the battle. We
have proved that it works to fight for justice. We are only halfway, but
resumption of the case gives me strength to fight for my life again. "
She gives
Stine a high five, and they laugh.
This post, and all translations about Fernanda Milan have a CC, Creative Commons licence and may be used freely as long as authorship is attributed
FOR MORE
INFOMATION
T-Refugee
Project: t.refugee@gmail.com / 6061
0566
Søren Laursen,
retspolitisk talsperson, LGBT: soren_laursen@lbl.dk
Demonstrations in Madrid:
https://www.facebook.com/events/179424342182357/
Facebook: Save Fernanda Milan, T-Refugee Project, ’Asylum for
Fernanda Milán’- demonstration
T-Refugee Project Demands
Asylum for Fernanda
Milán!
Minister of Justice and the Red Cross must assume responsibility for rapes in a refugee camp!
Compliance with the Refugee Convention recommendations on gender and sexuality as possible asylum criteria!
Compliance with the Refugee Convention recommendations on gender and sexuality as possible asylum criteria!
INTERVIEW AND PRESS PHOTOS
T-Refugee Project can provide contact to Fernanda Milán, a representative of T-Refugee Project, DIIS senior researcher Ninna Nyberg Sørensen and Søren Laursen from LGBT Others
T-Refugee Project is happy to make press photos available. Contact us for further information.
T-Refugee Project can provide contact to Fernanda Milán, a representative of T-Refugee Project, DIIS senior researcher Ninna Nyberg Sørensen and Søren Laursen from LGBT Others
T-Refugee Project is happy to make press photos available. Contact us for further information.
FERNANDA-THE BACKGROUND
Fernanda Milán fled Guatemala after including being attacked and threatened by the police. She has for many years been a thorn in the side of large parts of civil society and the authorities because she is transgender and working for transgender rights in Guatemala.
Through her work in the organization OASIS Fernanda Milán received a lot of exposure as a spokesperson and model for other trans people. Therefore, Fernanda's life would be in imminent danger if she were deported to Guatemala. The deportation date is known in Guatemala, and it is therefore likely that her enemies there are ready to welcome her when she arrives at the airport.
Fernanda Milán fled Guatemala after including being attacked and threatened by the police. She has for many years been a thorn in the side of large parts of civil society and the authorities because she is transgender and working for transgender rights in Guatemala.
Through her work in the organization OASIS Fernanda Milán received a lot of exposure as a spokesperson and model for other trans people. Therefore, Fernanda's life would be in imminent danger if she were deported to Guatemala. The deportation date is known in Guatemala, and it is therefore likely that her enemies there are ready to welcome her when she arrives at the airport.
In protest against the
Refugee Board's decision, activists
formed a support group,
T-Refugee Project, which believes that the refusal of asylum rests on substandard legal work, which
did not take into account all aspects of the case.
"The Refugee Board has simply not done their job well enough in this case," said one of the activists, Stine Larsen, who explains:
"It does not take sufficient account of the fact that Fernandas political work means that she is in imminent danger of being individually persecuted in Guatemala. Therefore, we believe that the Refugee Board should give Fernanda Milán asylum.."
"The Refugee Board has simply not done their job well enough in this case," said one of the activists, Stine Larsen, who explains:
"It does not take sufficient account of the fact that Fernandas political work means that she is in imminent danger of being individually persecuted in Guatemala. Therefore, we believe that the Refugee Board should give Fernanda Milán asylum.."
The
T-Refugee Project also demands that Denmark follows EU directives and
recommendations from the UNHCR to include gender identity as a major factor in asylum
cases[1].
The
European LGBT organization ILGA
is very critical of the fact that Denmark
does not comply with these recommendations and that the Danish
authorities have failed to protect
Fernanda as she, as
a trans woman was
placed in a male section of
Sandholm refugee camp and subsequently raped by several
the residents. In March 2012 the UN human
rights committee expressed concern about discrimination and violence against such
transgender people in Guatemala.[2]. A situation which the
Danish authorities should take
seriously as Fernanda is at high risk of abuse
because of her identity as
a trans woman who
publicly fight for the transgender rights
FACTS: REFUGEES THE COMMISSION CONSIDERS THAT GENDER IDENTITY
MAY BE SUBJECT ASYLUM
UNHCR (the UN refugee commission) recommends member states, and this includes Denmark, to take gender identity into account as a cause of persecution and thus eligibility for asylum. Denmark does not follow these recommendations.
UNHCR (the UN refugee commission) recommends member states, and this includes Denmark, to take gender identity into account as a cause of persecution and thus eligibility for asylum. Denmark does not follow these recommendations.
FACTS: WHAT IS TRANSGENDER?
Being transgender means to have a gender identity that does not match the body you were born with. For example, Fernanda Milán identifies as a woman, but is born with a male body. Being transgender is not a sexual identity in line with eg. hetero-or homosexuality. As transgender, the sexual identity can both eg hetero-or homosexual.
Being transgender means to have a gender identity that does not match the body you were born with. For example, Fernanda Milán identifies as a woman, but is born with a male body. Being transgender is not a sexual identity in line with eg. hetero-or homosexuality. As transgender, the sexual identity can both eg hetero-or homosexual.
This post, and all translations about Fernanda Milan have a CC, Creative Commons licence and may be used freely as long as authorship is attributed
Tuesday, 18 September 2012
11th hour appeal makes Danish authorities postpone expulsion of transgender asylum seeker Fernanda Milán. Asylum Activists are optimistic.
"A reopening of the case has been requested, and until the Refugee Board advises the police about whether Fernanda will be in Denmark during the investigation, the police will take no further action over the matter. We probably have at least won a few days,” wrote the group on its Facebook page.
"The fact that the authorities have moved the expulsion of Fernanda shows that they recognize that it is dangerous for her to return. The only thing we do not understand is just why they did not go all the way and give her asylum immediately," says Emil Cronjäger from the support group, who continues:
"But we are optimistic because we believe that Fernanda’s case was mishandled in the first place, and that a review is necessary to meet the requirements of both Danish legislation and international conventions", says Emil Cronjäger.
Friday, 14 September 2012
Denmark cannot escape responsibility for Fernanda.
The Pan-American Human Rights organisation,
The United Nations Association,
The Danish Institute for International Studies,
OASIS human rights organisation in Guatemala
and now
Amnesty International;
all say that Guatemala is one of the most dangerous places in the world for a transgender person. These organisations all provide ample evidence of widespread and systemic murder, harrassment, torture and official persecution. Charred bodies, stabbed, shot, tortured or just "disappeared" are the norm in a country where the average life expectancy of a trans person is 25.
The Danish Refugee Board does not think so however, and the Danish Prime Minister Helle Thurning-Schmidt does not want to get her hands dirty by involving herself. The official Danish policy is that it does not grant asylum to trans people because they are trans. However this does not mean that trans people do not suffer persecution, just that Denmark refuses to acknowledge that they do. Just because you refuse to see something does not mean it doesn't exist.
Yet, by sending Fernanda Milan back to Guatemala they are in clear breach of international law which states that it is illegal to deport someone to a country where they are likely to be killed or tortured. Whether or not Denmark has a policy of granting asylum to trans people they cannot ignore, either legally or morally, the actual situation on the ground in Guatemala. If Fernanda is sent back in three days' time she will die. Most people think she will not see 2013. some consider that she will not see October, some are of the opinion that she may not even get out of the airport alive.
If the Danish government does deport her, they will, in doing so, be responsible, both directly and indirectly, for her death, and that is something trans people around the world will not allow Helle Thurning-Schmidt to forget. In the end the buck stops at her office. She may not "recognise" gender identity as a reason to grant asylum, but if Fernanda is sent back to her death the consequences for the Danish Prime Minister will be real and will last a lifetime.
The United Nations Association,
The Danish Institute for International Studies,
OASIS human rights organisation in Guatemala
and now
Amnesty International;
all say that Guatemala is one of the most dangerous places in the world for a transgender person. These organisations all provide ample evidence of widespread and systemic murder, harrassment, torture and official persecution. Charred bodies, stabbed, shot, tortured or just "disappeared" are the norm in a country where the average life expectancy of a trans person is 25.
The Danish Refugee Board does not think so however, and the Danish Prime Minister Helle Thurning-Schmidt does not want to get her hands dirty by involving herself. The official Danish policy is that it does not grant asylum to trans people because they are trans. However this does not mean that trans people do not suffer persecution, just that Denmark refuses to acknowledge that they do. Just because you refuse to see something does not mean it doesn't exist.
Yet, by sending Fernanda Milan back to Guatemala they are in clear breach of international law which states that it is illegal to deport someone to a country where they are likely to be killed or tortured. Whether or not Denmark has a policy of granting asylum to trans people they cannot ignore, either legally or morally, the actual situation on the ground in Guatemala. If Fernanda is sent back in three days' time she will die. Most people think she will not see 2013. some consider that she will not see October, some are of the opinion that she may not even get out of the airport alive.
If the Danish government does deport her, they will, in doing so, be responsible, both directly and indirectly, for her death, and that is something trans people around the world will not allow Helle Thurning-Schmidt to forget. In the end the buck stops at her office. She may not "recognise" gender identity as a reason to grant asylum, but if Fernanda is sent back to her death the consequences for the Danish Prime Minister will be real and will last a lifetime.
Wednesday, 12 September 2012
Expulsion of Transactivist in Conflict with Danish Policy.
My translation of article in Danish newspaper Homotropolis...
September 12th,
2012 Homotropolis
Everything indicates that if the
transgender human rights and LGBT activist Fernanda Milán is expelled from
Denmark to Guatemala on Monday, she will be in danger. The Refugee Board’s
decision arouses indignation and amazement.
On
Monday, human rights and LGBT activist Fernanda Milán will be deported to
Guatemala, where she is at serious risk of assault, torture and death. This is
not just Fernandas own assessment of the situation in Guatemala, but also the view
of senior researcher at the Danish Institute for International Studies (DIIS),
Ninna Nyberg Sorensen, who for has many years studied the situation in the
Central American country. Nyberg Sørensen says that Denmark is already fully
aware of the risk to which we expose Fernanda Milán, by condemning her to
deportation, she cannot understand the decision:
“That
LGBT people in Guatemala suffer from cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment -
that included threats of violence, torture, enforced disappearances, sexual
violence in prisons and other institutions, and medical testing without prior
consent - is not only known among national, regional and international human
rights people, but also by the Danish state.
Denmark,
has since 1992 supported human rights organizations in Guatemala and the Pan-American
Human Rights System. The Danish development system has continued to receive
reports from organizations it funds, in which murders and assaults on activists
have been clear. Why does the Refugee Board not have this knowledge relating to
the treatment of Fernanda Milan’s asylum case?”
Refugee Board failure
The
Asylum Working Party, T-Refugee Project, which is committed to Fernandas case,
is also dismayed by the decision.
“It
seems completely obvious to us that the Refugee Board has not done an adequate
job in this case. The decision to refuse asylum has been taken without all
relevant information being included in the decision, and obviously this shouldn’t
be allowed.” says Emil Cronjäger in a press release, and backed by Stine
Larsen, also from T-Refugee Project:
“It
may surprise many as to why this knowledge has not been taken into account when
the Danish government has known about it for years. It seems frankly like shoddy
work, and I do not think that it puts Denmark in a particularly positive light when
we on the one hand support human rights work around the world, while on the
other, deport even those openly persecuted by torture and killings. It
is deeply hypocritical and directly subversive of the foreign policy set by the
Government. So they cannot both say that they support human rights and
simultaneously expel a person like Fernanda Milán. It simply makes no sense,
"said Stine Larsen.
Reasoned and well-documented fears
Ninna
Nyberg Sørensen, amongst other things, an expert in gender, migration and
deportation in Central America, has a thorough knowledge of the situation of
human rights activists and LGBT people in Guatemala, and says it the prospects
are not good.
“Fernanda
Milan's fears are not unfounded. Over the summer of 2012, the Inter-American
Commission on Human Rights expressed its concern over the murders of first a
19-year-old trans woman in Guatemala City (28 June), then two trans women in
Villanueva (July 9), and finally the murder of a Honduran transgender person in
Guatemalan territory (11 July). Local trans and human
rights organizations report murders or 'forced disappearances' of at least 30
transgender people in Guatemala from 2009-2010. In the period 2005-2008
reported killing of approx. 50 LGBT people. The bodies are often terribly
mauled, it is not uncommon that genitals are cut off, or that the body is
dismembered to send out a warning that only heterosexual gender identity and
practice will be accepted. A report from March 2012 estimated the average life
expectancy of transgender people in Guatemala to be 25 years”
Demands for Justice minister’s
involvement
Emil
Cronjäger from T-Refugee Project also emphasizes in its press release that the
Danish government has a direct responsibility for Fernanda Milan's fate and
urges the Minister of Justice to investigate:
“If
Denmark does not change its decision in this case, we are directly complicit in
the abuses to which Fernanda Milán will be exposed in Guatemala. Responsibility
cannot be swept away with the claim that there wasn’t enough evidence about the
local situation, we now have many years evidence about this. It cannot be swept
away by arguing Fernanda is not personally persecuted: She's been attacked and
threatened repeatedly, including by the national police PNC.
“Just
the fact that she is transgender should in itself be enough that she should not
be expelled. This group is so extremely exposed, as it is. When you then
include the fact that she has been a figurehead for human rights organization
OASIS, whose leading members the last few years have been murdered
indiscriminately, then it's completely outrageous that the Refugee Board
chooses to continue to reject her application. I sincerely hope that it is an
error by the authorities and not a general pattern or a conscious decision.
“If
we choose to maintain this decision, Denmark is not just on a collision course
with the UN Refugee commission's crystal clear statements about persecution
based on gender and gender identity as a basis for asylum. We are also helping
to undermine our own foreign policy to strengthen human rights around the
world. I invite the Minister of Justice to take up this matter and reverse this
decision, so we are not complicit in human rights abuses and so we do not put
our own foreign policy to shame.” Says Emil Cronjager
Friday, 7 September 2012
Demonstrators want change in Danish Asylum policy: Stop the deportation of human rights activist Fernanda Milan.
Tomorrow, Saturday the 8
September, at midday asylum activists will demonstrate at Kongens Nytorv in
Copenhagen with the aim of preventing the deportation of Guatemalan Fernanda
Milan. According to the organisers from the T-Refugee Project her expulsion
does not take account of international conventions and individual risks.
Fernanda Milan stands to be
deported on the 17th September after being refused asylum by the
refugee board. As a result a group of activists in Denmark formed the support
group T-Refugee Project. Emil cronjager from the group says;
“We don’t think the refugee
board has understood that as an individual, Fernanda’s life is in danger in
Guatemala. Because of Fernanda’s gender identity and her political activism she
risks persecution, attack and eventual death. She is in extreme individual
danger, if she is sent back to Guatemala.”
Stine Larsen, who is also
active in the T-Refugee Project adds: “Fernanda is a well-known face in
Guatemala because, over the course of many years has been open about being
transgender, and also because she has been a spokesperson for the OASIS organization
which works for trans people’s rights.”
Fernanda Milan is
convinced that there was no other option other than to flee:
“I know no transgender people
in Guatemala older than 35 and many of my friends have been killed. When
I was repeatedly attacked by members of the public and police officers, I decided
that I had to do something to save my life."
“I
fled to Denmark, because I had heard that it was a good country for minorities.”
Fernanda is sorry she had to
leave her family and her friends from the human rights organization OASIS
"As a human rights
activist, I am used to fighting for other trans people’s lives. I'm sorry that
I had to leave my country because I was an important leader in fighting for
transgender people. They needed me. But I'm sure I would have been killed if I
had not fled. I had to do it. "
For
Saturday's demonstration, T-Refugee Project invited a wide range of people, the organization believes that Fernanda
Milan's case is a matter that cuts across political and social boundaries.
"We believe that everyone
in Denmark must see that we should observe basic human rights. Unfortunately,
Denmark is on a collision course with the EU and the UN Refugee Convention over this
case, and we do not understand why she has been turned down. It appears to have
been the result of a bad decision-making process. Both her transgender
status and her background as a human rights activist represent huge risks for
her if she is sent back to Guatemala. But when you combine the risk factors,
it's utterly inconceivable that we in Denmark have decided to refuse her
asylum,” states Emil Cronjager.
Ninna Nyberg Sorensen, a
researcher at DIIS, is one of those who has declared her support for T-Refugee
Project's demonstration. Just on the basis of its general knowledge about human
rights in Guatemala supports Fernanda’s right to asylum in Denmark:
"Violence against women
and minorities is widespread in Guatemala, and it has been repeatedly
demonstrated that state authorities, for example. the national police; PNC, has
been involved in sexual violence and killing, not least prostitutes,
homosexuals and trans people. This violence has been described as 'social cleansing', and has
often had political support. An incompetent legal system and widespread
impunity makes the situation more serious. Not only do sexual minorities risk
being mistreated and killed; criminals will in all likelihood not be punished." she says.
T-Refugee Project also believes
that Denmark is guilty of the same impunity that exists in Guatemala, when the
rapes of Fernanda Milán in Sandholm not investigated. Stine Larsen explains:
"Can it really be that
Denmark cannot protect an asylum seeker better than this? Fernanda Milán had to
flee the refugee camp because of repeated rapes there, where the Red
Cross had placed her in the men’s dormitory. Is this how Denmark treats asylum
seekers? Is this how Denmark treats minorities?”
Emil Cronjager continues: "The
Attorney-General's responsibility is to ensure that such a thing does not take
place, and that when there are serious errors like this, they are investigated. In the T-Refugee Project, we demand that the Minister of Justice goes in
and investigates. Those responsible must be punished, and the Red Cross should receive
training about trans people’s needs and rights."
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