Protesters outside Harmondsworth Detention Center. Photo courtesy of Movement for Justice
A hunger striker in Harmondsworth, near Heathrow, who has not eaten since Sunday morning told me, "We need our freedom. People have been detained for months here with no end in sight, some over a year. We need to get our story out. You guys need to help us. We will not eat until the Home Office gives us an answer. But they are not responding."The asylum seeker told me that he fled Nigeria when his parents were killed, and added: "There are between 200 and 300 people on hunger strike here. Yesterday a guy collapsed from not eating and they took him to hospital. We are suffering, we need everybody to know what is going on here and ask the government to release us. We came here because our lives are in danger back home. We are told we need evidence to prove our case. But how can you get that evidence if you are locked up like this?"Protests started at Yarl's Wood detention center in Bedfordshire, last Tuesday, taking place both inside and outside the women's detention center. Yarl's Wood has been at the center of allegations of sexual abuse and a damning undercover Channel 4 News report showing racist staff showing little regard for the mental and physical health of detainees. Women, including pregnant women, kicked off the protest by writing, "We are not animals" on their t-shirts.On Friday scuffles broke out at the Verne detention center, a former prison in Dorset, after detainees claim guards started beating up an inmate who attempted to harm himself.
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IRC Morton Hall, one of the affected centers
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