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Into the Legal Abyss: The Invisibility of Immigration Detainees in South Africa Preventing Torture and Abuse Through Oversight. Roni Amit JD, Ph.D. ISS 4 th International Conference National and International Perspectives on Crime Reduction And Criminal Justice 21 August 2013.
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Into the Legal Abyss: The Invisibility of Immigration Detainees in South AfricaPreventing Torture and Abuse Through Oversight Roni AmitJD, Ph.D.ISS 4th International Conference National and International Perspectives on Crime Reduction And Criminal Justice 21 August 2013
Key Aspects of SA’s Detention Regime • Securitization of Migration • Have moved from discretionary to routine practice of detention • Limited access to rights within detention
Detainees outside Lindela following a court ruling ordering their release
Lindela Detention Centre • Only authorised immigration detention facility • Detentions only for the purposes of deportation • Daily operations contracted to Bosasa: limits contact with immigration officers • Border (Musina) • No authorised facility • SMG no longer in use • Detention and deportations directly from police cells Detention Facilities
The Detention Regime Refugees Act • Asylum seekers and refugees • Detention an exceptional category • Detained asylum seekers retain status Immigration Act • All other categories of migrants • Detention of illegal foreigners, but only for the purposes of deportation • Procedural guarantees to prevent arbitrary or indefinite detentions
Repercussions of Securitization • Merging of Asylum and Immigration Regimes detention of asylum seekers as illegal foreigners • General failure to adhere to procedural guarantees in the Immigration Act: detentions not governed by law EFFECT: Lindela has become a legal abyss: no legal identity in detention
Merging of Immigration and Asylum: Expansion of illegal category From asylum seeker to illegal migrant: • An individual arrested as an illegal foreigner retains this status after applying for asylum • An individual becomes an illegal foreigner if his/her asylum permit expires • Initial rejection = illegal foreigner • ‘right to sojourn’ can be exercised from detention • Asylum seekers who do not have another legal way to enter the country = illegal foreigners
Absence of Procedural Protections • Verifications not taking place + presumption of illegality • Failure to obtain necessary warrants to extend detentions • Deliberate circumventing of legal procedures • Detentions longer than 120 days • Arbitrary and indefinite detentions • Detentions not governed by law • DHA continues to engage in practices ruled illegal by a court
Monitoring at Lindela Lack of Monitoring at Lindela • Only SAHCRC empowered to conduct unauthorised visits • DHA does not grant permission for monitoring visits • Limited information about immigration detainees • Information from previous surveys and legal cases on behalf of individuals
Who is in Detention: • How many people? • For how long? • Do they have any claim to remain in the country? • What is the risk if returned to countries of origin? • Only those individuals who manage to obtain legal assistance become visible • Most detainees unable to exercise legal rights Invisibility of Immigration Detainees
Need New Approaches to Advocacy Around Immigration Detention Move beyond traditional understandings of detention monitoring: alternative mechanisms for information gathering to counter DHA’s control of information New strategies for advocacy: move beyond focus on rights violations Focus on issues that will resonate with the public, e.g. costs, ineffectiveness, rule of law Make immigration detainees visible again
Into the Legal Abyss: The Invisibility of Immigration Detainees in South AfricaPreventing Torture and Abuse Through Oversight Roni AmitJD, Ph.D.ISS 4th International Conference National and International Perspectives on Crime Reduction And Criminal Justice 21 August 2013