- Ay family
The Ay family were Kurdish
asylum seeker s who became the centre of a controversy in 2003 surrounding the policy of locking up children in high security detention centres in theUnited Kingdom [cite web | title = Executive 'failed' Ay family | publisher = BBC News : Scotland| url = http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/scotland/3131637.stm | date = 2003-08-07 | accessdate = 2007-05-18] .Salih and Yurdugal Ay were Kurds seeking asylum who came to the UK to escape persecution in
Turkey , it being alleged that Mrs Ay had been locked up and raped by Turkish militia. They brought their four children with them and settled in Gravesend inKent where the children attended local schools. Salih was deported to Germany and from there further deported back to Turkey where he disappeared.In 2002, Yurdugal Ay and her children were suddenly removed from their home by immigration officials and taken to
Dungavel detention centre inSouth Lanarkshire , Scotland. They were all put together in one room where they lived for a year inside a razor wire surrounded compound. Yurdugal could not speak English very well so it was up to her eldest daughter, Beriwan Ay aged 13, to negotiate for the her mother and her sisters. The family were threatened with deportation but appealed. It was claimed by the authorities that they had brought the long stay atDungavel upon themselves by this appeal.Conditions in the privatised detention centre, run by an American company, were far from satisfactory. There were no proper education facilities for the children.The children were treated as prisoners with just 2 hours exercise outside allowed each day.There were very limited play facilities.The
Children's Commissioner for Scotland described the situation there as 'morally distressing' and threatened to report theUK Government andScottish Executive to theUnited Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child . TheBritish Home Secretary at the timeDavid Blunkett appeared to disregard various conventions on human rights requirements about not imprisoning children claiming that the other alternative — separating the children from their parents and putting them into care — was also undesirable.Bishop
John Mone met Beriwan Ay on a visit toDungavel and was appalled by what he discovered. During a later visit he smuggled a video camera into the centre [clergymen not being searched there] ,interviewed Beriwan to camera and released the video to the media.This was shown on BBC televisions'Newsnight programme.A media storm ensued. The
Scottish Executive had responsibilities for children's welfare inScotland but was clashing with a non devolved act from theUK parliament inWestminster .Eventually the Ay family lost their appeal against deportation and were forcibly deported via
Stansted Airport toGermany where they were granted asylum.BBC Radio 4 broadcast a play byFrank Deasy called "Broken English" about the case onOctober 27 2006 from Beriwan Ay's point of view [web cite | author = Moira Petty | title = Radio review - Drama | publisher = The Stage | url = http://www.thestage.co.uk/features/feature.php/14697/radio-review-drama | date = 2006-10-30 | accessdate = 2007-05-18] .References
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