In Scotland we have a proud history of protest, of raising our voices against the injustices that blight our society and speaking truth to power.
We – the undersigned – are proud to work in a country that values compassion and fairness. Though across our communities and sectors we work to achieve different things, today we are united in our opposition to the UK Government’s Nationality and Borders Bill.
We name the Nationality and Borders Bill for what it is: an anti-survivor law, an anti-refugee law, an anti-safety law. It is a gift to abusers and exploiters, and we have no doubt that it will harm survivors of sexual violence, gender-based violence and those who flee persecution. It will harm children and young people, increasingly the victims of forced displacement and exploitation in the world. It will harm all of us and our values.
This anti-survivor law betrays what has gone before.
The UK with many other states said never again. We resolved after the horrors of the Holocaust to establish an international legal system to protect the displaced, the persecuted, the refugees who need safety and to rebuild their lives. That is why we have a Refugee Convention. It is for survivors. It has protected millions of the most vulnerable in our world over generations, and that is something we should be proud of.
Millions of people across generations in the UK have campaigned for the rights of refugees and women and girls, children and survivors of human trafficking and exploitation. Courageous people formed movements to defend human rights and dignity. This Bill endangers all that movements and Governments have achieved for refugees and survivors of trafficking and exploitation.
To sever our links from the international community and from the Refugee Convention is an act of harm, not only to ourselves and to the very fabric of our values, but left as it is, we can be in no doubt that this Bill will kill and leave people to suffer.
In the creation of this Bill and the decision to wilfully omit safe routes for any person, including women and children fleeing gender-based violence, the UK Government lose any credibility in their claim that responding to violence against women and girls is a priority. Assertions that the UK Government is a “world leader” against trafficking and exploitation are empty. Any grand words about ending sexual violence or female genital mutilation (FGM), commercial sexual exploitation or forced marriage are just that, words. Words will not protect those who are in a position of extreme vulnerability – we need action.
We need action to withdraw a Bill that, if passed, will criminalise survivors on arrival and trap people who have fled atrocities in severe poverty and isolated accommodation holding centres. We need action to withdraw a Bill that demands that survivors disclose the abuse and violence they have been subject to – to strangers, in a new and unfamiliar environment, within a short deadline – or risk their personal ‘credibility’ in the eyes of a hostile UK state. We need action to stop children being subjected to an invasive Home Office age assessment regime that violates their identity and bodily integrity. We must act to make sure that children are not wrongly subject to increasingly unsafe adult systems and left to fend for themselves. This Bill is an assault on everything we know about trauma and trauma informed practice.
Far from protection, this Bill is punishment. We must act – in Scotland – to use the powers we have to object in the strongest possible terms, to push back and stand with our fellow human beings through practical action, and to say loudly and clearly: not in our name.
Scotland can do something.
Standing by is not an option. In Scotland we can do something.
In signing our names, we – as representatives from across the Third Sector in Scotland – stand together and oppose this Bill, and ask Members of the Scottish Parliament, and those we entrust to protect our rights:
- To support the Scottish Government’s Legislative Consent Memorandum, withholding consent for provisions in this Bill on 22 February 2022, and to unify in condemning this rights-removing legislation as a whole
- To ask the Scottish Government to use existing powers under section 9 of the Human Trafficking and Exploitation (Scotland) Act 2015 to maximise protection for survivors of trafficking and exploitation
- To undertake a full review of flagship Scottish Government strategies – including on Equally Safe, New Scots Refugee Integration, the Ending Destitution Together and the Ending Homelessness Together policies as well as the Mental Health framework – with a view to taking action within devolved areas of competence to prevent and mitigate the harmful impacts of the Bill
- To commit to ensuring that the Scottish Human Rights Bill provides a clear and explicit commitment to upholding the rights of refugees and migrants in Scotland
- To request that the Lord Advocate provides human rights compliant guidance to police and prosecutors in deciding whether it is in the public interest to prosecute refugees and survivors of exploitation for how they have arrived in the UK
Signed:
Sandy Brindley, Rape Crisis Scotland
Jen Ang and Kirsty Thomson, Just Right Scotland
Sabir Zazai, Scottish Refugee Council
Alys Mumford, Engender Scotland
Dr Patrycja Kupiec, YWCA Scotland
Marsha Scott, Scottish Women’s Aid
Jan McLeod, Women’s Support Project
Shruti Jain, Saheliya
Mariam Ahmed, Amina MWRC
Rachel Adamson and Laura Tomson, Zero Tolerance
Katy Mathieson, Scottish Women’s Rights Centre
Anna Ritchie Allan, Close the Gap
Amanda Purdie, Amma Birth Companions
Traci Kirk, Govan Community Project
Vicky Nyanga-Ndiaye, Project Esperanza
Giri Jamba, Shakti Women’s Aid
Alison Watson, Shelter Scotland
Undram Munkbhat, Ubuntu Women’s Shelter
Annika Joy, Safe in Scotland
Pinar Aksu, Maryhill Integration Network
Elaine Cameron, Refugee Survival Trust
Ako Zada, Community InfoSource
Sally Ann Kelly, Aberlour
Maggie Brünjes, Homeless Network Scotland
Lorraine McGrath, Simon Community
Robina Qureshi, Positve Action in Housing
Joy M Gillespie, SOHTIS
Caroline O’Connor, Migrant Help
Bronagh Andrew, TARA
Hailey Maxwell, Thistles and Dandelion Project
Asma Abdalla, Empower Women for Change
Josh Littlejohn MBE, Social Bite
Kate Polson, Rock Trust
Just Citizens
Aaliya Seyal, Legal Services Agency
Pam Hunter, SAY Women
Dylan Fotoohi, Refugees for Justice
Gianluca Palombo, CodeYourFuture
Steven McCluskey, Bikes for Refugees
Executive Director, WSREC
Alison Phipps, UNESCO Chair (Refugee Integration through Languages and the Arts)
Shan Saba, Scotland Against Modern Slavery
Clare MacGillivray, Making Rights Real
Angela Ireland, MILK Cafe
Davy Thompson, White Ribbon Scotland
Olivia Ndoti, Women’s Integration Network Scotland
Jessica Paterson, Friends of Scottish Settlers
Rev Karen Hendry, Church of Scotland’s Violence Against Women Task Group
Sara Cowan, Scottish Women’s Budget Group
Almahdi Abdurahman, Sudanese Community in Glasgow
Jackie Ross, The Friends of the Amal Project
Nikki Culpin, Soroptimist International of Edinburgh
Dr Gari Donn, UN House Scotland
Benjamin Napier, Citizen’s Advice Edinburgh
Alison Bavidge, Scottish Association of Social Work
Amy Woodhouse, Children in Scotland
Nawaf Mohammed, Inclusive Homework Club
David Duke, Street Soccer
The Equally Safe Edinburgh Committee
The Edinburgh Adult Protection Committee
The Edinburgh Child Protection Committee
Jay Rubinstein, Massive Outpouring of Love (MOOL)
Sandy Greene, Scrapantics
To add your name and organisation please email
brenna.jessie@rapecrisisscotland.org.uk
Nationality and Borders BillUpdates