Home secretary urged not to deport Lydia Besong and her husband, who fear they will be persecuted in Cameroon
Bestselling authors and leading human rights figures have joined
forces to condemn the UK Border Agency's decision to deport a
Cameroonian playwright and her husband.
Playwright Lydia Besong, who is threatened with deportation. Photograph: Guardian/Christopher Thomond |
A coalition of writers, including the former children's laureate Michael Morpurgo, Helena Kennedy, Monica Ali, Hanif Kureishi, Nick Hornby and Alan Ayckbourn, have written to the home secretary, Theresa May, to urge her not to deport Lydia Besong and her husband, Bernard Batey.
Kennedy,
a leading QC, described the agency's decision to deport the couple as
"hideous" and "insensitive", and called for an overhaul of the way women
are treated in the asylum system.
Besong is due to be deported back to Cameroon,
where, she says, she was raped and would be persecuted for speaking out
against the government. She is expected to leave on Saturday, barring
successful last-minute efforts attempts to stop her removal.
Supporters
say Besong was not informed that her husband's latest appeal against
deportation had failed on 23 December. Instead the pair were taken into
detention when they registered normally with immigration services on 10
January.
Since arriving in the UK in 2006 Besong has written three
plays about her life as an asylum seeker and criticised the political
situation in her home country.
Besong's play How I Became an Asylum Seeker – produced by Women for Refugee Women,
who continue to support her – has been performed in Manchester,
Salford, Liverpool and London. She believes that a return to Cameroon
would bring danger to her and her husband, after her work garnered
negative media coverage there.
Rehearsals for a new play were due
to begin in Manchester the week Besong was detained at Yarl's Wood
removal centre, with a performance scheduled at an international theatre
festival in Bristol at the end of March. Her husband is being detained
separately.
Morpurgo said he was begging the home secretary not to
remove a "remarkable woman". He said: "How this country treats asylum
seekers is the measure of what kind of a people we are. Lydia was
oppressed in Cameroon. That there is risk she will be imprisoned and
abused again seems undeniable. That she is extraordinarily brave in her
stand against oppression is clear. And that her talents would be of
great value to us as a citizen in our society would seem to be obvious."
Kennedy
said the manner in which Besong and Batey had been detained was unfair.
"The way in which this was done was hideous, with the couple not
informed they were going to be removed. The whole way it was carried out
was insensitive and terrible."
She added that the Home Office and
the UKBA was failing women. "There are serious concerns about the
culture of disbelief in the immigration system," she said, adding that a
lack of training and willingness to listen meant women who had been
raped were not able to tell their stories. "There is an ongoing lack of
understanding of the issues and how they affect women, because they do
affect women differently."
Lawyers for the couple are now seeking
an emergency judicial review to stop the deportation. Supporters argue
that cuts to legal aid have left Besong more exposed, and reliant on
fundraising to pay for legal representation. "It is so hard to get good
legal advice in these cases and cuts to legal aid mean the only way of
getting advice is to rely on others to pay. It is just hellish," said
Kennedy.
Speaking from Yarl's Wood, Besong said: "Of course it
would put me in danger if I was returned to Cameroon. There is no hiding
that my work is critical of the current government. I would be detained
indefinitely. There is no freedom of expression in Cameroon, this is
happening every day."
But she would not stop writing, she added.
"I wanted to highlight what was happening at home," she said. "If it
couldn't be beneficial to me maybe it could be beneficial to others. I
didn't know I would find myself in this situation. I am very, very,
scared."
The couple say they were jailed and tortured in Cameroon
as punishment for involvement with the SCNC pressure group, which
campaigns for southern Cameroon's independence. Besong said that while
in jail, she was raped by a guard.
Previously, Juliet Stevenson,
Joan Bakewell, Andrea Levy, Ali Smith, Sarah Waters, Lisa Appignanesi,
Linda Grant and the writers' group English Pen, have all expressed support for Besong
Source:The Guardian
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