By: Andy Xu
Following the constant backlash against the British government’s plan to electronically
monitor refugees, Boris Johnson responded last Sunday from a British air force base
defending the plan. The prime minister claimed that the digital tags would ensure that
“asylum seekers can’t just vanish into the rest of the country.”
However, refugee organizations and human rights lawyers have strongly condemned
Johnson’s plan, saying that this new policy is inhumane and that the surveillance may
have very damaging consequences on people that have already been abused in the
past.
Enver Soloman, the chief executive of the Refugee Council, said “It’s appalling that this
government is intent on treating men, women and children who have fled war,
bloodshed and persecution as criminals. This draconian and punitive approach not only
shows no compassion for very vulnerable people. It will also do nothing to deter those
who are desperately seeking safety in the U.K.”
The prospect of tagging and surveillance of refugees that have already been tortured
and abused in the past has also unsettled and angered many people.
Sue Willman, a human rights lawyer and the chairwoman of the Human Rights
Committee at The Law Society, said that “The amount of suffering that can be caused to
someone who is a torture survivor or who is mentally ill far outweighs the very minimal
benefits for the government.”
It should be noted that a recent government figure found that “only 1 percent of people
released on bail actually abscond,” which renders this policy ineffective, costly, and
harmful.