Asylum seekers deported to France live in fear of smugglers’ reprisals | Immigration and asylum

In accordance with Labour’s “One In, One Out Deal ,, the first group of asylum seekers to France talked about the fear of being followed by smugglers and going back to their country.
Men spoke a few hours before a larger group of asylum seekers group was forced to France on a special charter flight to Paris early on Thursday morning, and a second decline was planned in Albania. It is thought that at least seven people will be removed with a significant increase in a ‘one output’ lifting process.
In his first media interviews, a group of six asylum seekers from different conflict zones speaking from a homeless shelter in Paris said that Guardian would hide them if French officials try to move them to a European country where they were given fingerprints before they came to England.
Since England is no longer a part of the EU, they cannot control the fingerprints of asylum seekers in a EU database. But France has access.
“We are very afraid of what will happen to us,” he said. “I was told that we could request asylum in France, but no one has explained what we should do. When I travel to England, I ran away from the smugglers in Calais and I am afraid that they will find and kill me here.”
A home office brochure given to asylum seekers detained in the United Kingdom: özen If you choose to return to your country of origin, the procedures, procedures and financial assistance will be announced by the French authorities for the first days of your arrival. ”
A second asylum seeker said: “One of the asylum seekers with us has already abandoned France to go to another part of Europe because he was afraid of fingerprints. He left France without a jacket and blanket.”
Guardian said they were 17 years old from the group he talked to with two people, but the Ministry of the Interior determined that they were over 18 years old.
“We have not received any help with housing, clothing, education or anything since we came to France,” he said.
A member of the group sent a photo of the cramped conditions in a shelter for homeless people they were placed. Beds with simple beds are placed close to each other.
“We do not receive appropriate care and support,” the other said. “We’re fighting here and we’re afraid that we may be attacked on the street.”
The detainees in the UK are waiting to be lifted to France, they know that they knew at least seven people because of their flying on Thursday, which was placed on individual Air France commercial flights, but a significant rise in numbers because it started with only one person per flight.
An asylum seeker said his sister was a British citizen living in the United Kingdom and hoped to allow him to live with him under the rules of the Family Meeting.
“The Ministry of the Interior was not allowed to be allowed to stay with my sister and sent me to France. My sister tried to fight the house office. But he couldn’t prevent me from being sent to France. He took new shirts with me and gave me 40 £ 40.”
“We are in a very serious situation right now. We have nothing and we are very scared,” he said. “Please and please, we need justice.”
Guardian spoke to a man whom his home office tried to be detained on 18 September. He said he felt that he could not breathe properly when he was restricted by the guards because he didn’t want to ride on the plane.
A urgent Supreme Court struggle would take place to try to stop the flight of an asylum seeker in the afternoon on Wednesday. After the man’s ticket was canceled for Thursday, the case did not continue.
Maddi We are seriously concerned about the prosperity of the people who have been taken to France and a person with the potential victim of children who are taken to France and a potential victim of children who are taken to France.
“This plan does not provide security, it creates fear and pain that has a legal right to demand asylum in the UK.
A spokesman for the Ministry of Interior said: “Thanks to the new UK-France Treaty, people who come to the UK on small boats can be detained and returned, and the first inferences are already made.
“Parallel, a equivalent immigrants in France will be suitable for coming to England in a safe and legal way.
“This approach is designed to cope with dangerous small boat transitions that will rise over time and break the crime gangs that operate them.”




