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Sukula
family: community and trade union campaign wins right to stay
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28/03/08
From the Sukula Family Campaign
On 27th March almost three years after the start of the campaign
the Sukulas finally received the news that they'd been given indefinite
leave to remain. Over 3000 people have supported the campaign that
has also had the support of Unison, the NUT, the NUJ and other unions.
The Sukulas were one of the first families to have all benefits
withdrawn under the notorious Section 9 that the government had
hoped would drive families out of Britain by taking away their homes,
their benefits and even their children who would be placed into
the care of social services with the adults made destitute and homeless.
The campaign declared that if any attempts were made to evict the
Sukulas we would form a physical blockade around the house to prevent
either eviction or deportation. We gained support of local unions
and Bolton Unison backed social workers who refused to initiate
care proceedings purely because of government imposed destitution.
This stance was backed by the British Association of Social Workers
and later Unison nationally.
As a result of this defiance by workers and the massive community
support, taken up by the local paper the Bolton News, the council
refused to evict the Sukulas. Following this another ten Greater
Manchester councils and then councils in Yorkshire made a similar
commitment to refuse to evict families of failed asylum seekers.
The Sukulas themselves lived 17 months without benefits living only
on community support and proceeds from the campaign (which is therefore
several hundred pounds in debt). Hundreds demonstrated against the
Act and led by the Sukula campaign Section 9 was smashed! In addition
we successfully campaigned against Flores Sukula being expelled
from Bolton Soxth Form College- purely on grounds of being a failed
asylum seeker- with Bolton NUT and the NUS threatening a campaign
of massive publicity and protest of the college authorities didn?t
back down. We also prevented the forced dispersal of the Sukulas
to Liverpool.
As a consequence of this the government had to back down and settle
thousands of asylum cases, the so-called legacy cases. If we had
not assembled a range of trade union and community activists prepared
to take militant action up to and including physical blockades then
the government would not have its policy on families left in tatters.
There is however still a lot to do. We have always from day one
campaigned against all deportations- of men, women, children of
anyone. This is why we have supported the No One is Illegal trade
union conferences, the second of which met 29th March 2008 with
some hundred trade unionists planning action to oppose immigration
controls and organise migrant workers. We demand the right to work
and have continually pushed for a national network of trade unionists
and community campaigns prepared to take physical action and strike
action to defend migrants and refuse to implement immigration controls.
We need a network of parents, teachers, other education workers
and students to declare schools are no deportation zones. But we
also need community campaigns with the ability to mount emergency
defence pickets and we need trade unions to recruit all workers-
documented or otherwise- to demand the right to work and organise
at trade union agreed rates and to turn the success of exemplary
campaigns like the Sukulas into a national movement of defiance
to smash all immigration controls.
The family and campaign thanks everyone who has supported us and
will continue to fight against all deportations.
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