This is an account of the death of Jackie Nanyonjo - here she is at a recent demo.
I've simply re-posted the account from the Movement for Justice website. To her family and many friends in this country, who fought so hard to keep her with us, I send my deep sympathy.
Jackie Nanyonjo died in Uganda last Friday as a result of the injuries
inflicted by the Home Office's licenced thugs who deported her from
Britain on 10th January. Jackie was a fighter for herself and for
others: a lesbian who escaped from anti-gay persecution and a brutal
forced marriage, and a member of the Movement for Justice. In Britain
she had been able for the first time to live and love openly as a
lesbian; she was much-loved by a wide circle of friends who kept in
touch with her after she was deported and who miss her deeply. All of us
who knew her, or who didn't know her personally but are determined to
end the regime of racism and anti-immigrant bigotry that is responsible
for her death, will fight to win justice for Jackie.
Jackie
had been through the mental torture of the immigration and asylum
system, with its arbitrary, subjective decisions and impossible demands
to 'prove that you are a lesbian'. UK Border Agency and an Asylum
Tribunal had dismissed out-of-hand the ample evidence of friends and her
partner that Jackie was a lesbian and rejected her claim for asylum.
She was sent to the further mental torture of Yarl's Wood women's
detention centre in November 2012 - a few weeks after detainees had
shaken the power of the UKBA in an uprising of mass protest against
brutality and injustice led by the Yarl's Wood Movement for Justice
group and Jackie had been part of a solidarity demonstration at the UKBA
headquarters in Croydon. Jackie continued her fight in Yarl's Wood.
When the UKBA tried to deport her in December Jackie resisted bravely
despite the brutality she suffered at the hands of the 'escorts'
provided by the contractor, Reliance. She forced them to abandon the
attempt and when she got back to Yarl's Wood she lodged a complaint to
the UKBA - a complaint the UKBA rejected.
With
all the limited avenues of Britain's racist immigration laws closed to
her and facing deportation to a country where it is a crime to be gay
and where the political and religious leaders have whipped up a
murderous anti-gay witch-hunt, Jackie's only option was physical
resistance. On 10th January, on Qatar Airways Flight QR76, Jackie fought
bravely for her freedom with all the strength she could gather against
four Reliance guards. She continued fighting when the guards drew
curtains round their end of the plane to hide their crimes. She
struggled for as long as she could until, beaten up, half strangled and
bent double, she was overcome by the pain in her chest and neck and was
unable to breathe.
When
Jackie arrived at Entebbe Airport the 'escort' party handed her over to
the Ugandan authorities, who held her for many more hours without any
medical attention. When family members finally met her, long after the
flight had landed, Jackie was in terrible pain and vomiting blood; they
rushed her to a clinic, but in a country with widespread poverty and
limited medical facilities they were unable to get the medical attention
Jackie needed. Since Jackie was in hiding as a known lesbian, protected
by relatives, every trip to a doctor or hospital involved a risk to her
life and to the safety of her family. They were condemned to watch the
agonising decline of Jackie's health and strength over the next two
months.
The Home Office and the UKBA are guilty of Jackie's murder.
They have licenced the brutality that Jackie suffered, even if they
pretend 'to look the other way'; they protect the thugs and the security
companies if an asylum seekers' death or injury becomes public
knowledge. Their policies and decisions are responsible for Jackie's
death. The guards who brutalised Jackie should be in jail and Reliance
should be condemned as an accessory to murder, along with Qatar Airways
and the repressive Qatari Government that is so willing to do Britain's
dirty work - but the real guilt lies with the politicians and
bureaucrats who run the Home Office and the UKBA, and ultimately with
the Coalition Government. Jackie Nanyonjo was a victim of the immigrant
bashing policies of Theresa May, the racist Home Secretary.
The Movement for Justice is putting the UKBA on trial for Jackie's murder. Jackie
is by not the first person to die at the hands or through the actions
of the UKBA but we want to make sure that she is the last.
Justice for Jackie means above all exposing the UKBA before the Court of
Public Opinion, challenging its power so that what happened to Jackie
never happens to anyone else, and shutting down Yarl's Wood detention
centre. It means building the movement that Jackie joined, in Yarl's
Wood and other detention centres and outside, in our communities and on
our campuses, and end the injustice of detention and deportation. Join us this Thursday at the demonstration and speak-out at the Home Office on Marsham Street, London SW1.
End Detention! Stop Deportations! Defend Asylum Rights!
Open Borders & Equal Citizenship for All!
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