New Statesman launches campaign against child detention
This week’s editorial says:
Throughout its years in government – from Tony Blair’s famous “Education, education, education” speech to the more recent “Every Child Matters” programme – Labour has claimed to champion the needs of the younger generation. For the 2,000 children who are sent to UK immigration detention centres every year, however, these claims ring hollow.
These children are torn from their homes, their communities and their friends, locked up for an indeterminate length of time, and denied adequate education and health care. Their only crime is to have parents who have applied for asylum in the UK.
This week the New Statesman launches amajor campaign, No Place for Children, Together with our backers – the Children’s Commissioner for England, the Children’s Society, Bail for Immigration Detainees and Women for Refugee Women – we believe the current situation reflects shamefully on a government that prioritises appearing “tough on immigration” over the welfare of innocent young people.
In the coming weeks, the NSwill run regular reports on this important issue, and encourage our readers to get involved in the campaign by signing a petition to be launched later in September. With your help, we hope to show the government that every child really does matter, including and especially the most vulnerable.
For more articles on the issue, see this week’s New Statesman
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Reader comments
It’s good news although the readers voted for asylum -period- not just focussing on children, although it might be a smart tactic and a way into examining the whole issue but I think we will have to make sure it doesn’t go for easy options or sentimentalism and lets New Labour’s appalling policies off lightly.
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