MaltaToday previous editions

MT 27 November 2016

Issue link: https://maltatoday.uberflip.com/i/755517

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 3 of 59

maltatoday, SUNDAY, 27 NOVEMBER 2016 4 News CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 This month the home affairs ministry announced that THP-n will no longer be issued by the Office of the Refugee Commissioner while current holders will be able to re- new their certificates, provided that all current eligibility criteria are met. Introduced in 2010, THP-n was described by the former Refu- gee Commissioner, Mario Guido Friggieri, as "an ex gratia type of protection". THP-n did not grant failed asylum seekers a legal title and certificates were issued on the Commissioner's discretion. "Our refugee claim was rejected and we were then given tempo- rary protection, but we have now been told that it will not be re- newed once it expires next year. This means that we will no longer have a work permit and we were told that once an agreement is in place with Eritrea, we will be de- ported." The couple live in central Mal- ta and pay €600 a month in rent and although their children were born at Mater Dei Hospital, the children are officially registered as Eritreans. Maltese law stipulates that a person born in Malta only ac- quires Maltese citizenship at birth if a parent of that person is either a Maltese citizen or born in Malta. "We would like to become Mal- tese but we know it's difficult. Yet, after 11 years and after set- tling in Malta, we want to live a normal life, at least with tempo- rary protection. We just want to work and continue living regu- larly," the Eritrean couple said. Eritrea continues to come un- der fire for its poor human rights record and its national service programme, which forces over- 18s to spend most of their lives in military service or working for the government. Thousands of people are cur- rently held incommunicado in arbitrary detention for ques- tioning government policies, for their work as journalists, for practising a religion not recog- nised by the state, or for evading national service conscription. Human rights groups say that because many Eritreans leave the country illegally, or without gov- ernment consent, they can face imprisonment and harassment upon their return. Policy change will make hundreds 'destitute' Two weeks ago, human rights NGOs said the removal of THP- n will render hundreds of men, women and children destitute and this constitutes a regression of fundamental human rights. The human rights advocates reiterated their appeal that mi- grants – who are by the state's own admission non-returnable through no fault of their own – be offered the possibility to regu- larise their status in Malta. This would acknowledge their contri- butions, securing a dignified life and supporting various economic sectors. "All persons who so far have been enjoying THP-n, a form of protection that has enabled them to live in security and relative peace of mind, will have their rights stripped off them," the NGOs said. "The many years they spent working in Malta as employees or employers, forming relationships, paying their fiscal contributions, renting homes and in many cases supporting entire communities in their countries of origin, will sud- denly be erased." The scheme announced by the Ministry for Home Affairs will require hundreds of men, women and children "to comply with re- quirements the ministry knows they are unable to meet, includ- ing procurement of identification documentation and the labour market test". The NGOs said that the minis- try knew too well that for many, the requirements were simply im- possible to fulfill, as several coun- tries of origin refuse or are unable to provide these documents. 153 MINISTRY FOR THE FAMILY AND SOCIAL SOLIDARITY MINISTRY FOR FINANCE C M Y CM MY CY CMY K 153 ENG C2.pdf 1 18/11/2016 20:36 'We want to lead a normal life' 16 arrested Malians in Malta since 2011 Half of the 28 failed asylum seekers still detained at the Safi detention centre and awaiting their repatriation next month have been in Malta for more than five years, A home affairs ministry spokesperson told MaltaToday that 16 of the arrested Malians – all male – arrived in Malta between 2007 and 2011. The other 12 arrived between 2012 and 2015, with six of them having been in Malta for a year. Their age varies between 20 and 40 years, the spokesperson added. Asked whether Mali is considered as a safe country of origin, the spokesperson said "security concerns relating to Mali are limited to the country's northern region," adding that the government is acting within its rights and obligations. This month, the UN refugee agency said that in October more than 2,000 men, women and children from northern Mali sought refuge in Mauritania from ongoing banditry and interethnic violence. More than 135,000 Malians who have fled the conflict in their country live in exile, mainly in Burkina Faso, Niger, and Mauritania, where Mbera camp continues to be home to more than 42,000 men, women and children. UNHCR said the conflict is not contained in the northern part of the country, but frequent security incidents are reported in central Mali which continue to trigger sporadic forced displacement in the region, both internally in Mali and into the other neighbouring countries. Pointing out that Malta's asylum system has an independent appeals stage, the ministry spokesperson said "individual requests for asylum are assessed, due consideration is given not only to the general situation in the country, but also in his or her region of origin. In practice this means that should the situation be unstable or dangerous in a particular territory or region, then only persons hailing from that region would be considered for international protection." The ministry said that the 28 Malians detained in Safi have had the opportunity to go through Malta's asylum system "yet they have been found not to be deserving of international protection. "This is because these people would not be subject to persecution upon return, nor is the situation in their country of origin such as to pose a risk of serious harm or loss of life," the spokesperson added. 28 failed asylum seekers await their fate at the Safi detention centre with an African delegation expected in Malta in December

Articles in this issue

Archives of this issue

view archives of MaltaToday previous editions - MT 27 November 2016