No Safe Place : Children of Mothers Fleeing Torture and Sexual Violence. North East Conference on Sexual Violence November 2010

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Transcription:

No Safe Place : Children of Mothers Fleeing Torture and Sexual Violence North East Conference on Sexual Violence November 2010

Medical Foundation North East Margaret Bird Counsellor/Caseworker

What do we mean? Asylum Seeker someone who is fleeing persecution in their country of origin, has arrived in another country, made themselves known to the authorities and exercise the legal right to apply for asylum. Refugee someone whose asylum application has been successful and who is allowed to stay in another country having proved they would face persecution in their own country. Refugees in the UK have the same rights as permanent residents.

Torture Survivors Context Foreigner Migrant Asylum Seeker Torture Survivor

No Safe Place...

Multiple Contexts People seeking support from Medical Foundation are living within multiple contexts - Triple Trauma Model trauma, fleeing, exile Gender based persecution/use of sexual violence as torture women s experiences in CO and UK European and UK legislation Asylum Process in the UK culture of disbelief; uncertainty; dispersal; detention Provision for basic human needs Psychological / Psychotherapeutic Issues Access to legal, medical and psychological support Power imbalances structural, individual, including racism, sexism Professional s / Supporter s own responses/parallel processes/power position/history Parenting within extreme, terrifying and traumatic circumstances Triple Jeopardy for children and young people Human rights for whom?

Trauma

Types of Torture 1 Blunt Trauma: crushing injuries, whipping, beatings Penetrating Injuries: gunshots, shrapnel, stab wounds, slash cuts Suspension Burns: chemical and thermal, cold and heat Asphyxiation: wet, dry, chemical Electric Shocks Forced Human Experimentation

Types of Torture 2 Traumatic Removal of Tissue /Appendages: via either direct avulsion or explosion Extreme Physical Conditions: forced body positions (prolonged constraint) and extreme heat/cold conditions Sexual Torture: sexual humiliation, trauma to genitalia including FGM and electrocution, rape and other sexual assault, forced to enact sexual torture Mental Torture: direct threats, sensory deprivation, solitary confinement, mock execution, witnessing torture, uprooting

Contexts of Sexual Violence Rape is used as a weapon in war, civil conflict as well as nonwar contexts, in the home as well as dangerous places It may be used by men as a perceived right within marriage And as a tool of control to limit women s behaviour, to control: when, where and how we can use public space (e.g. judges have referred to the length of a women's skirts, accepting lifts, invitations to dance if you do these things many people say that the rape is your fault

Some Effects of Rape / Fear of Reporting Impacts of sexual violence are grave; women may be affected for the rest of their lives. It can lead to : Physical injury and serious / chronic medical problems Psychological damage Life-threatening consequences - HIV/AIDS Forced pregnancy, infertility, miscarriage Stigmatization / rejection by family members and communities or being punished by further violence / death (many women feel shame, fearing rejection from husbands, families, communities if they speak about / report having been raped. The threat of divorce or possibility of becoming "unmarriageable" underlies many women's reluctance to voice their experiences; Further vulnerability (additionally it may not be safe to report to authorities as they may be the perpetrators or the system may not provide protection or redress ) Medical Foundation Justice Denied Report (2009) www.torturecare.org.uk Amnesty International www.amnestyusa.org/women/rapeinwartime.html

Honour and Shame Violence against women is based on traditional views of women as men s property, and as sexual objects. Around the world, women have long been attributed the role of transmitters of culture and symbols of nation or community. Sexual violence against women is often considered an attack against the values or "honour" of a society, community as well as the individual women, making it a particularly potent weapon Amnesty International www.amnestyusa.org/women/rapeinwartime.html

No Safe Place...

Ways in which children may be affected Abduction to join an army of government or rebel soldiers (child soldiers) Rape / other sexual abuse before puberty or during adolescence Pregnancy during adolescence Being forced to murder and to rape during adolescence Being present at the abduction, abuse, torture, rape, or murder of parents / other family members Separation from significant attachment figures, eg being left behind, fleeing unaccompanied

Escape

Children s experiences Children who have experienced political violence, separation, loss and change can have their development severely damaged The events can affect a child s capacity to deal with new situations They may be unable to speak about their experiences

Children s Experiences Young torture survivors are likely to suffer a series of psychological symptoms that intimately impact on their sleep, their ability to trust, their relationships, their ability to care for themselves, and their ability to engage with life in the present.

One framework : Post Traumatic Stress Disorder Characterised by: Intrusion of traumatic experiences (eg nightmares, persistent memories, visions, associations) Anxiety /Arousal(eg panic, easily triggered, constant vigilance) Avoidance (eg distraction, dissociation, active forgetting)

Impact of Trauma on Children Adolescent soldiers are more likely than their more mature comrades to develop post traumatic stress disorder in combat Adolescent girls are particularly vulnerable to the trauma of sexual abuse The experience of terror and powerlessness during adolescence (and preadolescence) effectively compromises the three normal adaptive tasks of this stage of life: -the formation of identity, -the gradual separation from the family of origin -the exploration of a wider social world Judith Herman

Impact of Trauma on Children The traumatic impact of abuse on children has a key consequence - The fragmentation of the internal world Abused children experience a high level of disruption in their development and a sequence of experiences that are by definition overwhelming.

Exile

No Safe Place...

Children in the UK May have been born as a result of rape May have fled separately and been later reunited with parent / carer / family members May have fled following parents / carers abduction, imprisonment, disappearance or murder May have lost siblings, left them behind or have siblings in CO never known May be subject to dawn raids May be detained in the UK May be removed forcibly from the UK

Triple Jeopardy Refugee children suffer increased vulnerability due to Children and young people themselves - Disturbing nature of terrifying experiences difficult to hold or put into words Their parents or carers often find it just as difficult to hold those experiences in mind; additionally refugee adults very often may not know their way around the system or how to access help Potential Support agencies - Mental health services for children and young people often finding it very hard to hold terrifying overwhelming nature of refugee experiences in mind; furthermore services often not set up to manage quality of refugee children s vulnerabilities and multitude of loss, deprivation and horror, plus practical dilemmas in UK Jeremy Woodcock

Children of Traumatised Refugee Parents Some Possible Impacts : Overloaded by situation Distress and disturbance of parent Fear of losing parent Fear that parent s life will be threatened again in exile Deterioration in child s mental health

UNCRC United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child Sept 2008 - UK had to withdraw a reservation to the UNCRC with regard to children subject to immigration control In accordance with the UNCRC the best interests of the child will be a primary consideration (although not necessarily the only consideration) when making decisions affecting children.

Interface of Legal and Psychological Processes Common assumption that severe violence and torture will be easily remembered. Discrepancies in stories are used to undermine credibility and refuse asylum claim. Lack of information aimed at lawyers. Life and death decisions made by people who have little understanding of these significant psychological processes.

Interface of Legal and Psychological Processes Decisions over whether to grant asylum predominantly based on the asylum seeker s story. Story must be consistent and appear credible in the eyes of the Home Office. Expected to recall very specific details about events.

NB: Rape as a method of torture can also affect recall and disclosure of information. Bogner, Herlihy and Brewin 2007 Significant relationship between feelings of shame and PTSD avoidance symptoms: Avoiding thoughts and feelings about traumatic event Having difficulty remembering important parts of the traumatic event Plus frequently issues of language and cultural barriers

Children in immigration detention: are made to feel as if they are criminals for example, Being subject to dawn raids, long journeys in caged vans, roll counts, encountering racist abuse, witnessing violence and watching their parents being handcuffed and forced onto aeroplanes. When the Chief Inspector of Prisons asked what would make life better, detained children said they would like to go swimming and to return to their schools.

Experience Exacerbation

Children In Immigration Detention 2009 : 1065 children believed to have been detained Powers to detain children still remain with the UK Border Agency Recent Research: Medical Justice Report (2010) State Sponsored Cruelty : Children in Immigration Detention documents childrens and families experiences in detention in UK www.medicaljustice.org.uk

Some Protective Factors Adequate emotional expression Supportive family relations Good peer relations Positive networks and social communication Importance of good supportive environment

?

Working together

Some resources www.torturecare.org.uk Medical Foundation Report : Justice Denied : Experiences of 100 torture surviving women www.amnesty.org Amnesty Report : I can t afford justice : Violence against women in Uganda www.medicaljustice.org.uk Medical Justice Report : State Sponsored Cruelty : Children in Immigration Detention www.childrenssociety.org.uk Children s Society Report : Going It Alone : (Children in the asylum process) www.refugeecouncil.org.uk www.drc.vday.org Campaign against rape of women in Congo www.asylumaid.org.charter Women s Asylum Charter www.womenagainstrape.net (Rights and information sheet for survivors of rape seeking asylum in the UK) www.csel.org.uk Centre for the Study of Emotion and Law; research papers

Medical Foundation MLR (incl Psych & Couns) Human rights work Research and Publications Political influence Volunteers Supporters Placements People using services Holistic Assessment Individual therapy sessions Trauma Work Groupwork Creative activities Supervision / Consultation Training /awareness raising Supporting development of other services

Medical Foundation, North East Centre The Alan Smithson Rooms City House 1-3 City Road Newcastle upon Tyne NE1 2AF Tel: 0191 261 5825 Fax: 0191 222 1211 mfne@torturecare.org.uk www.torturecare.org.uk

No Safe Place : Children of Mothers Fleeing Torture and Sexual Violence North East Conference on Sexual Violence November 2010