Coventry Asylum and Refugee Action Group
Women for Refugee Women (WRW), together with its regional partners Women Asylum Seekers Together Manchester, Coventry Asylum and Refugee Action Group and Women with Hope Birmingham, has today launched important new research on the experiences of women who have been made homeless and hungry after seeking safety in the UK.
The report, Will I Ever Be Safe? Asylum-seeking women made destitute in the UK, explores the experiences of over 100 women from 29 different countries who have been made destitute in the UK after seeking asylum here.
WRW found that:
- Nearly a third of the women they spoke with had experienced sexual violence both in their countries of origin and again while destitute in the UK.
- Almost half were street homeless in the UK.
- 95% were hungry, and the same percentage of women were depressed while they were destitute.
These women were fleeing violence in order to seek asylum in the UK.
- A third said that they had been raped by state authorities in their countries of origin.
- A quarter of the women had been targeted because of their political activities; 16% are lesbian or bisexual and had been targeted because of their sexuality.
Over 150 asylum-seeking women, together with over 50 supporters, will come together in Birmingham on Friday 14 February to explore how to build solidarity and advocacy to end destitution.
‘Mary’ a refugee woman who was persecuted by the state in Uganda and now has refugee status, was made destitute and street homeless after her asylum claim was at first refused: “Being homeless made me feel so depressed that I tried to kill myself. I got refugee status in the end, but after so much pain and suffering.”
The report is illustrated by photographs taken by destitute asylum-seeking women.