Asylum

by Jeremy Corbyn in Tribune  

In the past decade, more than 29,000 people have either died or disappeared trying to cross the Mediterranean. Each had a name, a face and a story. Each life was a miracle to those that loved and depended on them ā€” and each death a stain on the collective conscience of those who have criminalised human beings just trying to survive. Politicians across Europe know that their hardline immigration policies will not stop people making the treacherous journey across the Channel. Thatā€™s not the point. Their intention is to whip up hatred, division and fear.

To many in our political class, mass death at sea is simply the price of grown-up ā€˜pragmatismā€™. Conservative and Social Democratic governments alike tell us this the only way to stave off the rise of the far-right: the AfD in Germany, Marine Le Pen in France, the Freedom Party in Austria, Vox in Spain, the Swedish Democrats, to name a few. However, governments who embrace anti-migrant rhetoric do not neutralise the far-right ā€” they only legitimise them and embolden them.

via Michael
in The Guardian  

The lives of detainees in Australiaā€™s immigration detention centres are controlled by a secret rating system that is opaque and often riddled with errors, a Guardian investigation has found.

Developed by Serco, the company tasked with running Australiaā€™s immigration detention network, the Security Risk Assessment Tool ā€“ or SRAT ā€“ is meant to determine whether someone is low, medium, high or extreme risk for factors such as escape or violence.

Detainees are also rated for an overall placement and escort risk ā€“ which may determine how they are treated while being transported, such as whether they are placed in handcuffs and where they stay inside a detention centre ā€“ but arenā€™t given the opportunity to challenge their rating, and typically are not even told it exists.

Immigration insiders, advocates and former detainees have told Guardian Australia the SRAT and similar algorithmic tools used in Australiaā€™s immigration system are ā€œabusiveā€ and ā€œunscientificā€. Multiple government reports have found that assessments can be littered with inaccuracies ā€“ with devastating consequences.