#pro.ke.k.a

  • Second hunger strike in #Moria detention centre this year

    On 26 August 2020, about 60 mostly Arabic-speaking detainees in Moria pre-removal detention centre (#PRO.KE.K.A) went on hunger strike. Since 5 March, Greece has been unable to carry out deportations to Turkey as a result of the Covid-19 pandemic. Detainees have been deprived of freedom for 174 days during which deportation – the only reason for their confinement – has been impossible. They are locked up without justification in conditions designed to drive them to despair.

    From 5 to 8 April this year, detainees attempted to hunger strike. Their protest ended after a special police unit interrogated the strikers, beating a number of them. What happened during those days is still unclear; many could not speak openly of conditions during these days for fear that conditions would be made worse.

    Many believe now that they have no chance of escape but that which they take for themselves. Suicide attempts are an almost weekly occurrence. On 6 January, a 31-year-old Iranian detainee took his own life after being held in isolation and denied access to psychosocial care. His death prompted a criminal investigation into staff and services at the facility.

    Yet despite this, a structure and culture of impunity has allowed the cycle of violence to continue. Beatings – sometimes verging on torture – have become routine, and those who speak out are threatened with violent reprisal. The link between detainees and the outside world is tethered to services operating under a culture of camaraderie between prison officer and medic, lawyer, psychologist, creating a closed rank between detainees and the public prosecutor.

    These abuses vanish under the code of silence that governs PRO.KE.K.A. The hunger strikers have chosen to break this silence.

    https://dm-aegean.bordermonitoring.eu/2020/08/26/second-hunger-strike-in-moria-detention-centre-this-year
    #Lesbos #hotspot #Grèce #asile #migrations #réfugiés #hotspots #PROKEKA

  • ‘We are here to die, or to obtain freedom’: Hunger strike in Moria pre-removal detention centre

    The prisoners detained in Moria pre-removal detention centre (PRO.KE.K.A) in Lesvos have been on hunger strike since 5th April 2020. The #PRO.KE.K.A hunger strikers demand their immediate release to avoid the disastrous consequences of a virus outbreak in the prison.

    According to the hunger strikers, ‘All the world’s prisons have released the prisoners… we decided to die or freedom.’ The police in charge of the detention centre have responded with ridicule, intimidation and violence. A police special forces unit has been stationed in PRO.KE.K.A for at least 24 hours, harassing and threatening the detainees. According to one detainee, ‘They took out prisoners to interrogate one of them who received a beating … They want to know why we do this.’ Four detainees sewed their mouths closed in protest, however after a few hours doctor was called to come and remove the thread by force.

    The Greek state insists that no migrant detainees will be released. This is despite the announcement of a release of prisoners with low sentences remaining and a global release of prisoners during the Coronavirus pandemic. A court determined that those held in a closed camp in northern Greece should remain detained because they were a ‘flight risk’. Instead, the Greek government has increased detention of migrants, turning refugee camps into effective prisons where access to appropriate medical care, hygiene, water, and the ability to maintain social distance are tragically impossible. The hunger strike in Moria PRO.KE.K.A is not the first in Greece after the corona outbreak. On 3rd April, detainees in Drama’s Paranesti detention camp went on hunger strike after being served inedible food. One detainee reported: ”70 riot police entered the camp last night and beat everybody with batons, five people are in critical condition and rumours one is dead.”

    The men in Moria PRO.KE.K.A are held in administrative detention and have committed no crime. They are arrested only because of their status. Many of the detained are held only because of their nationality, coming from countries where statistically less than 25% are recognized as refugees. The claims of many are rejected without even receiving an asylum interview on the basis of ‘non cooperation’ simply because no appropriate interpreter could be found. Also held in Moria PRO.KE.K.A are those who broke the territorial restriction on the islands, people with a second rejection on their asylum claim awaiting deportation to Turkey, as well as those who have signed up to voluntarily return, despite there being no deportations scheduled in the foreseeable future.

    Legal monitors have described conditions in Moria PRO.KE.K.A as ‘inhuman and degrading treatment’. Detainees report regular incidents of police violence and harassment, for which nobody is held to account. This includes beatings, isolation, and collective punishment in the form of lack of access to food and telephones, which are a lifeline inside the centre as they provide access to legal support and a link to family and the outside world. Prisoners are routinely denied access to medical care and psychological support. Detainees regularly report lack of access to staff, denial of vital medicine, and a refusal to take those with serious conditions to the public hospitals. The imprisonment of alleged minors and survivors of torture and war is common. Single Syrian men are ruled ‘inadmissible’ for asylum and are held pending deportation to Turkey, which is considered a ‘safe third country’ for Syrian nationals under the EU-Turkey deal.

    The situation inside has reached crisis point after the implementation of New Democracy’s new asylum law. Since New Democracy was elected, there has been an increasing focus on rejections and deportations. People have been deported despite pending asylum cases. Those in Moria PRO.KE.K.A have no hope as their fellow detainees are deported without having set one free foot in Greece. On 6th January 2020 a 31-year-old man was found hanged in his cell after being placed in an isolated cell. Since then, there have been several suicide attempts. In one case, a man attempted suicide and was deported the following day. In more than one case, suicide attempts were preceded and followed by police violence and harassment.


    Food line in Moria camp: Even people who live in the open part of Moria camp have to queue in close quaters for hours.

    https://dm-aegean.bordermonitoring.eu/2020/04/08/we-are-here-to-die-or-to-obtain-freedom-hunger-strike-in-
    #grève_de_la_faim #Moria #Lesbos #asile #migrations #réfugiés #résistance
    ping @luciebacon

    • D’après les informations du site enoughisenough14 (https://enoughisenough14.org/2020/04/10/lesvos-forced-stop-of-hunger-strike-in-moria-prison-after-police-b) les grévistes de la faim du centre de détention (l’équivalent de CRA) de Moria ont été obligés d’arrêter leur grève, suite à une répression policière brutale. Voir le communiqué de
      No Border Kitchen Lesvos ci-dessous, où ils mentionnent également une grève de la faim à un autre centre de détention avant expulsion situé au nord-est de la Grèce, à Paranesti, près de la ville de #Drama (https://borderlandscapes.law.ox.ac.uk/location/drama-paranesti-pre-removal-detention-centre). Toujours d’après le site enoughisenough14 au #Paranesti (https://enoughisenough14.org/2020/04/10/greece-riot-police-and-brutal-repression-against-migrant-hunger-strikers-are-paranesti-detention-centre-in-drama/#more-69812) pre-removal Center une grève de la faim commencée le 3 avril aurait été très durement réprimée par des forces spéciales de la police anti-émeute, avec une férocité particulière ; il y aurait eu des actes qui relèvent de la torture. Merci à Odile Hélier d’avoir transmis ces informations. Si quelqu’un/une dispose d’informations supplémentaires, merci de relayer.

      –----

      No Border Kitchen Lesvos

      13 h ·

      Forced Stop of Hunger strike in Prison after police brutality.
      After three days of hunger strike the prisoners in Moria were forced to eat again. There have been several concerning allegations of police violence during the week, which people told to there friends on the fence. What exactly happened inside the prison we don’t know yet, because police have blocked prisoners’ communication channels with each other and with the outside world.

      Special-forces police units where present for the duration of the strike and different kind of police violence was reported. There were detainies removed from their cells for interrogation and at least one of them was beaten.

      The prisoners went on hunger strike with the demand for freedom and to be heard but police do everything they could to prevent this. They were not alone - in Paranesti detention centre, police also violently suppressed a hunger strike.

      The abortion of this hunger strike shows the determination of the state and its attack dogs to supress the voices of the people that are incarcerated in detention centres, pre removal centres and prisons worldwide. We must not forget, that the a hunger strike is the last resort if all other possibility’s of protest have been stripped from you. By committing to this, people have to against their survival instinct, because it’s the only option they have left. Now, because of the extreme violence perptuated against them this is also lost to them.

      We demand a world free of prisons. A world free of police brutality and uniforms. A world where no human can be incarcerated for the being born in the “wrong” country, the colour of their skin or their sexual orientation. We demand not only the immediate closure of Moria, but will fight for an end to a system that requires exclusion, prisons and violence to exist.

      We demand freedom of movement for all.

      –-> Reçu par Vicky Skoumbi via la mailing-list Migreurop, le 11.04.2020

  • CALL FOR ACCOUNTABILITY: Apparent #Suicide in #Moria Detention Centre followed failure by Greek State to provide obligated care.

    On 6 January a 31-year-old man from Iran was found dead, hung in a cell inside the Pre Removal Detention Centre (#PRO.KE.K.A.), the prison within Moria camp on Lesvos island. Police knew before they detained him that he had serious mental health issues, according to reports from several detained with him. Despite this, for approximately two weeks prior to his death he was kept in isolation.

    Within this PRO.KE.K.A. prison, those that are held there are the “undesirables” of the European Union and Greek State: the majority are arrested after arriving to Lesvos from Turkey, and held there immediately upon arrival, based only on their nationality. Others are considered ‘public security threats’ but they have never been tried or convicted. Others have had their asylum cases rejected, but they were judged in an unfair asylum system built to exclude migrants from Europe and maintain an undocumented and therefore exploitable population.

    This policy of collective punishment is commonly reproduced in courts and the media, which criminalize migrants and categorizes them as having a ‘low refugee profile’ before anything is even known about them individually. This concept of a ‘low refugee profile’ is implemented in PRO.KE.K.A. in Lesvos and Kos, through a pilot project. Those who come from countries where, statistically, less than 25% are granted international protection, are detained upon arrival from Turkey. This is mainly people from African states. Men from these countries who arrive to Lesvos without family, are arrested upon arrival and detained for up to three months. The new asylum law allows for increasing detention time for up to 18 months.

    PRO.KE.K.A. operates with little oversight or accountability. There, people are held with limited access to legal, medical or psychological support. People are detained in overcrowded cells 22 hours a day. According to detainees, psychological and physical abuse is common. Detainees have reported the following abuses: People are woken up at random hours of the night using noise and light. They are forced to spend two hours outside each day, even in the winter. Recently, there are reports that they are taken to where there are no cameras and beaten by the police, and beaten by the police while in handcuffs. People are granted access to their phones only at weekends, cutting them off most of the week from their families and support networks, and making communication with legal support almost impossible. Visits from friends and family are at times prohibited. Because of these reasons, reporting abuse is practically impossible for detainees. Also many report that they fear retaliation by the police and do not trust government or official organizations because they see abuse continue with no consequences for the police, even though the abuse happens under everyone’s eye.

    Almost no basic need is met. No adequate warm clothing, and only one blanket, meaning they must freeze in the winter months. Without interpreters present, detainees have limited means of communicating with prison officers, meaning that many do not know why they are detained or for how long. The food is inadequate and unhealthy, with many going hungry. At times, only one meal a day is served, and no food can be brought in from contacts outside. They are provided no basic hygiene products like soap or toothpaste, and outbreaks of scabies have occurred.

    The asylum claims of those detained in PRO.KE.K.A. are accelerated, and people are scheduled for interviews on their asylum claims within a few days of arrival, and access to legal aid is severely limited. Legal aid on appeal is routinely denied, despite having a right to a lawyer. Trapped in prison, detainees face huge difficulties submitting evidence to the asylum service to support their claims.

    The illegal detention of minors is commonplace because European Border Agency FRONTEX is systematically registering minors as adults. Torture survivors are also commonly detained despite an obligation by the state to screen for any vulnerabilities. Those with serious medical and psychological conditions are routinely denied access to healthcare. For example people with prescription medicine are not provided with this medication, even if they had it on their person when arrested. When people ask to see a doctor or psychologist, the police and AEMY – a private institution supervised by the Greek Ministry of Health – pass responsibility between each other and often people are never treated. Self harm is tragically common in PRO.KE.K.A.. At times, those with severe illnesses have been detained and deported by police and FRONTEX to Turkey, under the knowledge of UNHCR.

    Here in PROK.E.K.A. is where the man who died found himself in December 2019, when he was taken into detention. According to other people detained in PRO.KE.K.A., he spent just a short time with other people, before being moved to isolation for approximately two weeks. While in solitary confinement, even for the hours he was taken outside, he was alone, as it was at a different time than other people. For multiple days he was locked in his cell without being allowed to leave at all, as far as others detained saw. His food was served to him through the window in his cell during these days. His distressed mental state was obvious to all the others detained with him and to the police. He cried during the nights and banged on his door. He had also previously threatened to harm himself. Others detained with him never saw anyone visit him, or saw him taken out of his cell for psychological support or psychiatric evaluation.

    Healthcare in the prison is run by AEMY and the Greek state is its sole shareholder. Its medical team supposedly consists of one social worker and one psychologist. However, the social worker quit in April 2019 and was never replaced. The psychologist was on leave between 19 December and 3 January. The man was found dead on 6 January meaning that there were only two working days in which AEMY was staffed during the last three weeks of his life, when he could have received psychological support. This is dangerously inadequate in a prison currently holding approximately 100 people. KEELPNO is the only other state institution able to make mental health assessments, yet it has publicly declared that it will not intervene in the absence of AEMY staff, not even in emergencies, and that in any case it will not reassess somebody’s mental health.

    If we believe that this individual took his own life in order to escape from the abyss of PRO.KE.K.A., then it was the result of prison conditions that push people to despair, and the failure of multiple state agencies to provide him obligated mental health care.

    One death is too many. We call for an independent investigation into the circumstances surrounding the death on 6 January.

    https://legalcentrelesvos.org/2020/01/19/call-for-accountability-apparent-suicide-in-moria-detention-centr
    #Grèce #décès #mort #Lesbos #rétention #détention_administrative #mourir_en_rétention