Annual report 2011 – No Borders Project
This annual report reflects important achievements and contributions of the Social Action Centre/No Borders Project during 2011.
Download full version (PDF): here.
This annual report reflects important achievements and contributions of the Social Action Centre/No Borders Project during 2011.
Download full version (PDF): here.
Study by Demos thinktank reveals thousands of self-declared followers of hardline nationalist parties and groups
Source: Peter Walker and Matthew Taylor, guardian.co.uk, Sunday 6 November 2011
Warsaw, OSCE Human Dimension Implementation Meeting – September 26 – October 7, 2011
October 4, 2011, plenary session № 13: “Tolerance and non-discrimination II: Review of the implementation of commitments on promotion of mutual respect and understanding”.
Strasbourg, 16.06.2011 - Racism and intolerance are becoming rooted in European societies as the economic crisis gives strength to extremist messages, warns Europe's leading anti-racist body today.
Ethnic profiling—the use of racial, ethnic, or religious characteristics as a way of singling people out for police or security checks. In the United States, debate over its fairness and effectiveness has raged for years. In the United Kingdom, it's in the headlines.
In most of the rest Europe, it's a different story. Despite its widespread use by police forces and the festering resentment in affected communities, ethnic profiling is rarely examined; aside from the UK, no European government collects information on the ethnicity of those stopped by police.
But the Open Society Justice Initiative has documented the prevalence and impact of profiling in Europe, assembling evidence that shows it is not only unfair, but an ineffectual way of fighting crime.
The first step in the case on fight for the rights of the foreign students.
Rights of refugees, asylum seekers, migrants; racism
See full text of the report here
Project Assistant
Part-time position at the Social Action Centre/No Borders Project, Kyiv, Ukraine
Closing date: 1 April 2011
“No Borders” project of the Social Action Centre is pleased to announce the start of new project - ”Legal Assistance to Victims of Racist Crimes in the city of Kyiv”.
During past year the topic of legal assistance to victims of hate crimes and its importance for our efforts to combat racism and xenophobia in Ukraine has been widely discussed by civil society. It is our pleasure to inform you that “No Borders” project is making its first step in this direction and starting a new 6 month project supported by ABA ROLI (American Bar Association Rule of Law Initiative - http://www.abanet.org/rol/).
Kyiv (Ukraine) – The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees continues to be concerned about the situation of a Kyrgyz national who was denied access to Ukrainian territory in Boryspil airport where she arrived by the flight from Kazakhstan on 29 March 2012.
Statement of the international transborder meeting in Turkey, made on March 18, 2012 in front of Edirne detention centre
Kyiv (Ukraine) – The UN refugee agency (UNHCR) has noted that on 3 March 2012 European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg ordered Ukrainian authorities in response to a petition to the Court under Rule 39 that 3 stowaways on the ship docked at Mykolayiv seaport (2 from Eritrea, 1 from Ethiopia) should be allowed to disembark from the vessel and be granted access to asylum procedure to exercise their right to seek asylum.
Further information on UA: 29/12 Index: EUR 50/002/2012 Ukraine Date: 22 February 2012
URGENT ACTION
detained asylum-seekers stop hunger strike
The strike, held in protest by the group of Somali asylum-seekers and migrants, against their illegal detention and alleged ill-treatment, lasted for six weeks. The strike was halted by the group on 17 February after they received assurances from the State Migration Service that their asylum applications would be considered.
UNHCR is relieved to hear that the hunger strikes have ended at both detention centres in the Volyn and Chernigiv regions of Ukraine. The detainees, including many asylum-seekers and minors, were protesting against the length of their detention and demanded that the authorities consider their asylum claims in compliance with international standards.
Source: Human Rights Watch site
(Moscow, February 1, 2012) - The Ukrainian authorities should immediately stop police harassment and threats against Somali asylum seekers held at the Zhuravychi Migrant Accommodation Centre, Human Rights Watch said today. In a letter sent to the Ukrainian authorities, Human Rights Watch also called for the immediate release of all Somali asylum seekers who are being held in administrative detention pending deportation.
Source: UNHCR site
UNHCR remains concerned about the situation of detainees, including many asylum-seekers and minors who are currently held in two detention centres in the Volyn and Chernigiv regions[1] of Ukraine. Their situation remains problematic even after several visits of UNHCR staff and NGO lawyers and Government officials. To obtain clarity more visits and interviews are scheduled for the coming weeks.
Amnesty International has urged the Ukrainian authorities to stop the ill-treatment of a group of detained asylum-seekers and their supporters, who were attacked by security forces attempting to forcibly end a hunger strike.
To: Vitaliy Zakharchenko, Minister of Internal Affairs of Ukraine
Dear Mr. Zakharchenko:
We are writing to raise our concern about the arbitrary detention of some or all of a group of 125 Somali nationals detained at the Zhuravychi Migrant Accommodation Centre (MAC). Some of them are registered with the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) or the Ukrainian authorities as asylum seekers. Around 80 have told UNHCR they want to apply for asylum in Ukraine, but have not been allowed to do so.
Below is a part of Human Rights Watch report 2012 about the situation with human rights in Uzbekistan.
Uzbekistan’s human rights record remains appalling, with no meaningful improvements in 2011. Torture remains endemic in the criminal justice system. Authorities continue to target civil society activists, opposition members, and journalists, and to persecute religious believers who worship outside strict state controls.
Freedom of expression remains severely limited. Government-sponsored forced child labor during the cotton harvest continues. Authorities continued to deny justice for the 2005 Andijan massacre in which government forces shot and killed hundreds of protestors, most of them unarmed.
Reacting to the pro-democracy Arab Spring movements, the Uzbek government increased the presence of security forces across the country and widened its already-tight control over the internet. Despite the government’s persistent refusal to address concerns about its abysmal record, the United States and European Union continued to advance closer relations with the Uzbek government in 2011, seeking cooperation in the war in Afghanistan.

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