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IMMIGRATION AND ASYLUM

Deportation of Zimbabwean asylum seeker delayed


Zimbabwean asylum hunger strikers end action

Asylum fraudster exposed

UK deports hunger striking asylum seeker to Malawi

Hunger strikers 'exhausted but determined'

Asylum sekeers on hunger strike in UK detention facility

Msipa: Zimbabweans must rally and block deportations

No UK amnesty for failed asylum seekers

Zimbabwe asylum test case hearing starts

Sex-for-asylum whistleblower wins appeal

UK names new country guidance case for Zim asylum seekers

Two thirds of Brits want amnesty for immigrants

Scotland reviews 'legacy' asylum cases

UK threatens to deport Zim journalist to Iraq

UK sex-for-asylum whistle-blower faces deportation

Reaction to Court of Appeal judgment in AA

Full text of Court of Appeal judgment

Zimbabwe asylum case referred back to AIT

UK MPs debate Zimbabwe deportations

UK immigration amnesty texts a hoax

Court of Appeal to hear AA test case

MDC chairman a lying identity crook

UK warns on voluntary return scheme

Divided we fall

Let's get real about asylum issues

UK detains Zimbabwean asylum seekers

COMMENT: Betrayed by Blair, they will simply go underground

Full text of AIT judgment on deportations

Britain can deport Zim asylum seekers

The Home Office v Zim asylum seekers

Asylum tribunal hears evidence from ex-CIO men

UK asylum court battle set for July

By Staff Reporter

A ZIMBABWEAN asylum seeker who has been on hunger strike for 45 days has had her deportation to Malawi delayed for a second time after a judge ruled she was “unfit to fly”.

Maude Lennard, one of several Zimbabweans facing deportation to Malawi after entering Britain on that country’s passports, was told she did not have to board a flight to Lilongwe on Friday.



Lennard, who is a member of Zimbabwe’s opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) has failed in several bids to stop the UK from deporting her to Malawi where she has been told she faces jail for fraudulently acquiring that country’s passport.

Sarah Harland of the campaigning Zimbabwe Association said: "We're so relieved to hear that her flight has been stopped, and perhaps now these cases will be looked at with some compassion.”

A judge stepped in to stop the removal after a doctor at the Yarl's Wood detention centre in Bedford said she was well enough to travel. But a team of doctors who had taken an interest in her case convinced a judge that “to remove her without medical attention would prove a serious risk to her health”, her lawyer said.

“The in-house doctors did not agree with that, but the Immigration Service were presented with cogent evidence that she was not fit to fly," the lawyer added.

Dr Frank Arnold of Medical Justice, who provided evidence that Lennard was too unwell to fly, said: "This is a dangerous situation. Doctors in detention centres appear to be putting the interests of their employers ahead of the interests of their patients. If true, this is a violation of the duties of a doctor, and should be investigated."

Malawian human rights groups warn that Zimbabweans deported to that country face a life of destitution and a criminal trial for breaching that country’s citizenship laws.

Originally, five women embarked on the strike at the detention centre but one was deported to Malawi and another started eating again.

Britain has refused the women’s plea for asylum, insisting that they travelled on “genuine” Malawian passports and are therefore Malawian and not Zimbabwean as they claim.

The UK government is currently not deporting failed asylum seekers to Zimbabwe, awaiting the outcome of a country guidance case known as HS (Zimbabwe) which is currently before the Asylum and Immigration Tribunal (AIT).

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