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Asylum Seekers
Project
Background
Asylum Seekers
are people who have fled their own country because of a serious threat
to life or liberty. They may have been involved in political activities
or have been wrongly accused by an unjust criminal system. They have
left behind homes, often families and frequently professional careers
because they are in great danger. Some have sold all their possessions
in order to buy a passage to Britain.
Genuine Asylum
Seekers are grieving for a homeland they have only left as a last
resort. It will be their hope to return to their homeland when safer
regimes are established.
Asylum Seekers
must therefore be distinguished from those of safe and secure home
backgrounds, coming from poor and underdeveloped countries to seek,
a better standard of living in Britain.
Most seeking asylum
in the UK arrive in the South of England and in recent years a large
population has built up in the South east of England. Under new legislation
introduced on 1st April 2000, the Government is dispersing Asylum
seekers all over the UK. Families have very little choice about where
they are dispersed to. Councils all over the UK are required to participate
in this scheme
Glasgow City Council
has sought to take a responsible approach, taking a large quota of
Asylum Seekers to be housed in unused accommodation, under a financial
arrangement with the Government, at no extra cost to the City, the
Council has sought to pre-empt the activities of independent "Cowboy"
agencies by taking groups and placing them where there is appropriate
infrastructure of health and education services. Naturally this responsible
policy places a strain on the citys Health and Education Services.
Asylum Seekers
receive a very meager rate of 70% Income support, £10 per
week being paid in cash, the rest in vouchers which are redeemable
in participating shops, although the Vouchers Agency has sold
this system to shops on the basis that no change has to be
given and at least one large store, Safeway, has refused to
participate on the grounds that the system exploits Asylum
Seekers.
The Citys
largest allocation of Asylum Seekers is in Sighthill, with several
other large Clusters in Housing Schemes and the intention that the
second largest group will be located in our West End Area (embracing
the Kingsway, Plean Street, Lincoln Avenue, Kestrel Road and Kirkton
Avenue Flats the last three of which are within the Parish
of St Davids Knightswood).
Since Knightswood
has never previously had a large immigrant population this is a sensitive
matter. Having fled their homelands in terror many Asylum Seekers
have been victims of local violence in Glasgows Housing Schemes.
While this has also been true of our West End Area, alternative trends
have also been noted.
Most Asylum Seekers
report that Glasgow people are generally friendly. Moreover, while
some tenants, concerned at the deterioration in high rise life, have
been considering moving out and have been increasingly anxious about
the arrival of Asylum Seekers, some of the same people have praised
their new Asylum Seeker neighbours for their friendliness, interest
and hospitality and now find their landings to be friendlier and more
hospitable places than before!
While the Government
have been trying to establish a "Fast Track" system for
processing applications, it is clear that Asylum Seekers will have
to wait years in some cases to know whether they will be allowed to
stay.
Until applications
are dealt with they live on a very restricted income and are prohibited
from seeking work. In the meantime having arrived in this country
with little more than they stand up in and often very traumatised
they have considerable needs for material, health and social support.
Our
response at St. Davids
The
Friday Reception Centre
Since November
2000 the Friday Reception Centre has been opened from 10.00 a.m. to
Noon almost every week.
The Aim of the
Centre has been to welcome Asylum Seekers to the Area, offer a place
where they can have a cup of tea and chat and have access to the distribution
of clothes and household goods.
While we would
like to be able to sit, chat and get to know Asylum Seekers, giving
them Support, in practice, a disciplined system of appointments for
access to material support has shaped the way in which our work has
developed.
While the first
arrivals at our Centre were mainly Iraqi Kurds, the 130 plus families
now registered with us include those from Sri Lanka ( Tamil &
Sengalese), Pakistan, Afghanistan, Iran (Pharsee and Balochi), Turkey
(Kurdish), Iraq (Kurdish & Arabic), Kosovo (Albanian), Estonia
(Russian), Ziaire, Burundi and South Africa. There is therefore an
understandable resemblance between St Davids Church Hall and
the United Nations.
With new families
arriving weekly, it is important to give them first access to the
free clothes and household goods which are displayed in the large
church hall. Thereafter "regulars" with appointments are
given an opportunity. Those returning for fourth and subsequent appointments
are given less frequent staggered appointments, although they are
still welcome to join us for tea and chat.
Explaining this
system across the language barriers is, of course, very difficult
and there is a low level of understanding and tolerance of the appointment
and queuing system. The expectation that those who arrive earliest,
push in the door first and shout loudest will be taken first prevails,
but we hope they are learning to trust us and our system.
At times there
are expression of frustration and the task seems thankless. However,
most visitors are warmly appreciative.
Our service is
offered in the name of Jesus Christ. We hope to have simple Christian
literature available in relevant languages. We would like folks to
know that the friendship and help we try to give are offered in the
name of God who has first loved us in Jesus Christ. It is our earnest
desire that those who are in need would recognise the church as a
place of unconditional welcome and the cross as a trustworthy symbol
of Gods love.
How
you Can Help
Donations
Please donate
any of the following:
- Clothes
- Ladies, Men's,
Children's, Babies (There is a particular need for young men's clothes)
- Footwear of
all kinds
- Household
Goods
- Bedding: duvets,
quilts, blankets, sheets, pillows etc.
- Curtains
- Towels
- Kitchen Utensils
(There is a particular need for large pots for eastern cooking methods)
- Pictures and
ornaments (anything to brighten up a bare flat)
- Toiletries
- Prams and Buggies
- Toys
Volunteer
Help:
- On Fridays:
- Sorting donated
goods
- Setting up
tables
- Chatting
- Taking details
and administering appointments
- Manning tables
- Guiding Visitors
round the tables
- Sourcing ordered
items
- Delivering
ordered items to homes.
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