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NEWS November 15th
2004
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Remove Campsfield On Saturday 27th November people will be gathering outside Campsfield Removal Centre to protest against the fact that it still exists. Refugees and migrants have been detained in Campsfield for the last eleven years, for no other reason than having the audacity to have been born in a different country and want to live in Britain. Since it opened Campsfield has been privately run by our favourite detention and thuggery company Group Four, notorious for racism, cruelty and general incompetence. For more info on this check out www.closecampsfield.org.uk, www.barbedwirebritain.org.uk, the Group 4 proflie on CW website, back issues of Corporate Watch and the Guardian. In May 2004 it was announced that Global Solutions Limited (GSL), the section of Group 4 that runs Campsfield, was to be bought by two venture capital companies1, Englefield Capital and Electra Partners Europe, meaning that there will be an even greater focus than usual on making money out of the detention facilities it manages. GSL is especially proud of its work in the Private Finance Initiative (PFI) and Public Private Partnership (PPP) sectors - ie work with government bodies on privatising (or 'outsourcing') public services such as schools, hospitals and prisons. The company operates prisons and detention centres, among other services, in Britain, Australia and South Africa. Campsfield's eleventh anniversary comes just after the Home Office has given the go-ahead to another detention centre in Oxfordshire, just outside Bicester. This one will be the first to be built in a controversial new scheme of 'accommodation centres', where asylum seekers will be kept while their claims are being processed. The centre is supposed to be run along the lines of an open prison, although it sounds as though its location will make it very difficult for inmates to go anywhere else. It will have the capacity to accommodate 750 men, women and children. GSL has been given a ten-year contract to run the new centre, which will be built by Carillion. Carillion was created as a separate company by enthusiastic road-builder Tarmac in 1999. It shares with GSL a history of investment in PFI/PPP schemes (see Corporte Watch's profile on the UK construction industry), and is listed on GSL's website as a 'partner'. The New Labour government is a keen advocate of PFI/PPPs,
continuing where the Tories left off in outsourcing as many public services
as it possibly can to private companies. Aside from the fact that prisons
like these shouldn't exist at all, outsourcing them to private companies
leaves the prisoners particularly vulnerable to abuse, as Group 4/GSL's
experiences at Campsfield and Yarl's Wood have shown. Also as soon as
you make the running of prisons a profit-making activity, it is in someone's
interests that as many people as possible are kept locked up. This is
evident from the American experience, where prison privatisation has
already gone much further than it has here and one advocate of the idea
is quoted as saying: 'It's like a hotel with a guaranteed occupancy'2.
The Bicester Refugee Support group was campaigning
against the building of the centre. Now that it looks certain that it
will be built, the group is focusing on promoting the rights of asylum
seekers and looking for ways to support them when they are brought to
Bicester, working with Asylum Welcome (http://www.asylum-welcome.supanet.com/)
On 25th September 2004, 1105 people were detained in various establishments, including 'normal' prisons, in this country under the Immigration Act of 2000. Times they had spent in detention ranged from just days to over a year.3 Campsfield has the capacity to hold 180 inmates, and the Home Office currently has plans to expand it to hold 300. GSL is involved in the running of other prisons and detention centres including Yarls Wood, Oakington, Tinsley House, and HMP Altcourse. Look out for a new profile on the company coming soon to the Corporate Watch website. In the meantime, our favourite quote from GSL Australia: 'Mandatory detention is not imprisonment.'
For an article about the UK exporting PFI/PPP ideas to other countries, look at http://www.monbiot.com/archives/2004/10/19/exploitation-on-tap/ |