Photo: Albert Gonzalez Farran/UNAMID. Detaining migrants is costly and detrimental to their health
By Kristy Siegfried
Source: IRIN
JOHANNESBURG, 30 August 2013 (IRIN) - Countries around the world are
increasingly responding to influxes of irregular migrants and asylum
seekers by simply locking them up. States cite national security
concerns and suggest that such punitive measures will make undocumented
migrants and asylum seekers think twice before entering their territory.
In reality, there is no evidence that the threat of detention is a
deterrent against irregular migration or that it discourages people from
seeking asylum. But there is plenty of evidence that it is detrimental
to the physical and mental health of nearly everyone who experiences it.
Civil society groups have been particularly vocal about the negative consequences of detention on children
and other vulnerable groups, while the UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR) has
pointed out that under the 1951 Refugee Convention, it is unlawful to
penalize asylum seekers for illegal entry or stay provided they present
themselves to the authorities without delay.
But in the current economic climate, it is the mounting cost of
detention that is giving many governments pause. Grant Mitchell,
director of the International Detention Coalition (IDC), an umbrella
organization with 300 member groups in 50 countries, said that while
there continues to be “massive growth” in detention in a number of
countries, “equally, we’re seeing a lot of states that have been using
detention for 15 or 20 years finding it to be increasingly expensive and
hard to manage and not working as a way to deter people.”
Changes in thinking
A recent report
by the National Immigration Forum found that the US will spend over
US$5 million a day on immigration detention during the fiscal year
2013/14, based on its current capacity of 31,800 detention beds. But the
approximately $159 per day that it costs to detain a migrant in the US
is relatively low compared to the $210 per day that the Canadian Border
Services Agency pays for a bed in a provincial jail or the incredible
$540 per day that Sweden spends on keeping someone in one of its
detention centres.
Alternatives to detention, even those that include the provision of
housing and various kinds of support, come in at a fraction of the cost.
“There’s potentially huge savings,” said Philip Amarel of Jesuit Refugee Service (JRS) Europe, who authored a 2011 report
examining alternatives to detention. “Before the recession, the
economic argument wasn’t so compelling because [detention] was seen as a
necessary cost to bear. Now states are becoming more interested in the
cost argument,” he told IRIN.
States are also increasingly legally bound to use detention only as a
last resort, particularly in the case of asylum seekers and children.
Last year, UNHCR released new guidelines
relating to the detention of asylum seekers that emphasized the
unlawfulness of “arbitrary” detention in which less coercive
alternatives have not been considered. The European Union Return Directive
also stipulates that member states should not use detention if “other
sufficient but less coercive measures can be applied”. Still, Amarel
noted that while many EU states have since written alternatives to
detention into their laws, most are not implementing them in practice.
“They fear that migrants will abscond given the chance, despite the
evidence that if you have alternatives to detention that provide
comprehensive services and legal assistance and inform them of all the
possible outcomes that might come of their case, then compliance rates
really jump up,” he said. “Member states are also not at a place yet
where they can provide good alternatives to detention, largely because
they don’t know how or aren’t willing to invest resources. It’s not good
enough to just release people onto the streets into destitution.”
JRS defines alternatives to migration as “any policy, practice or
legislation that allows asylum seekers and migrants to live in the
community with freedom of movement… while they undertake to resolve
their migration status and/or while awaiting removal from the
territory.”
New models
Various models are being tried in different countries, with varying
levels of efficacy. “We didn’t find one country with the perfect model,
but we found a lot of good practices that can be combined to make
effective programmes,” said Mitchell of the IDC, which has produced a handbook on preventing unnecessary immigration detention.
He added that all of the most successful programmes shared common
elements, such as the provision of adequate material support, early
access to free legal advice and a case management system that keeps
migrants informed at every stage. “A lot of governments think that legal
advice can bog down a claim, when in fact our research found that early
legal advice and intervention reduces the time to complete a case and
increases chances of voluntary return.”
“Treating people humanely and fairly at the very beginning means they’ll
engage properly with the process,” agreed Alice Edwards, chief of
UNHCR’s protection policy and legal advice section, who wrote a 2011 paper on alternatives to detention.
Both Edwards and Mitchell cited a model used in Belgium as an example of
a best practice. The programme houses irregular migrants and asylum
seekers with children in government-owned apartments pending the outcome
of their cases. Each family is assigned a “coach” who explains the
immigration process, ensures their basic needs are met and makes
appointments with doctors, lawyers and the immigration authorities.
“The primary goal is to persuade families to return voluntarily, but
it’s not the only goal,” explained Geert Verbauwhede, an advisor with
Belgium’s Immigration Office. “For us, it’s also a positive outcome if
they obtain a staying permit.”
The programme, which started in 2008, remains fairly small, with only 25
family units, but Verbauwhede said that in the future, the coaching or
case management element of the programme could also be used for migrants
living in their own housing.
In Sweden, a similar alternative to detention is used for asylum
seekers, around 24,000 of whom are housed in apartments managed by the
Swedish Migration Board and another 13,000 of whom live with relatives
or in their own accommodation. Upon arrival, they are assigned a case
officer who handles their asylum application and a reception officer who
helps them with everyday needs, such as finding schools for their
children and making sure they receive a subsistence allowance.
“If people feel they’ve been taken care of and their case has been
properly scrutinized, they’re more likely to accept the outcome,” Niclas
Axelsson, a specialist in detention issues with the Swedish Migration
Board, told IRIN. “It’s about good behaviour management and treating
people with respect and having good communication with them.”
Sweden still maintains nine small detention units in five cities, but
detention is primarily used for asylum seekers who refuse to accept a
negative decision and return home voluntarily. “We don’t want to use
detention unless it’s necessary,” said Axelsson.
A Toronto-based non-profit called the Toronto Bail Programme (TBP) makes
uses of a slightly different model. In Canada, over 90 percent of
asylum seekers are released into the community with minimal conditions
that may include payment of bail. For those unable to afford the bail
amount or considered to be a flight risk, a request may be sent to the
TBP asking the programme to take them on as a client. As a substitute
for bail, TBP provides professional supervision at a cost of just over
$9 a day to about 312 clients. The clients, who include irregular
migrants as well as asylum seekers, are initially required to report to
the TBP office twice a week.
“If they prove to us they’re doing something constructive with their
time, then we can minimize reporting,” said Dave Scott, TBP’s founder
and executive director.
Most of the asylum seekers qualify for work permits, but TBP also helps
them apply for welfare benefits and social services. Clients with mental
health or addiction problems receive additional supervision from
qualified staff. TBP’s lost client ratio for the 2012/13 fiscal year was
just under 5 percent, well below the 10 percent stipulated by the
Canadian Border Services Agency.
Scott’s pragmatic approach includes careful screening of potential
clients. “I ask, ‘Should this person be released without conditions?’
Also, I don’t want to get involved with people who are about to be
removed or serious criminality cases,” he told IRIN. “I’m not the
Catholic Church or the Salvation Army.”
Humane approaches
According to Amarel of JRS, alternatives to detention programmes that
have been less successful are those that are only used when detention
centres reach capacity or when a refused asylum seeker faces imminent
removal.
“This has been a failure of a programme in the UK, where they start at
the end stage when the outcome has already been decided,” he said. “It
doesn’t work when the authorities don’t give migrants the chance to
explore all possible outcomes from the start.”
Successful alternatives to detention programmes share almost identical
outcomes, according to the IDC’s research. These include an average cost
savings of around 80 percent compared to detention and an average
compliance rate of 95 percent, meaning that very few of the migrants
fail to comply with reporting requirements or do not show up for court
appearances.
For Axelsson of the Swedish Migration Board, replicating successful
programmes in other countries depends on having not only the appropriate
policies and resources, but also the political will. “If you look at
[asylum seekers] as criminals, I think perhaps you’ll have a problem,”
he said.
“It’s important that you try to change perspectives and ask yourself,
‘If I was in the applicant’s shoes, how would I like to be treated?’”