The Philippines took measures early in the pandemic to prevent the spread of COVID-19 in detention centres, though measures appear to have targeted prisons rather than immigration centres. In April 2020, authorities announced that some prisoners would be released to alleviate overcrowding and avoid the spread of COVID-19 (see the 18 May 2020 Philippines update). […]
Detention Blog
Immigration detention in Latvia (from report of the European Committee for the Prevention of Torture 2022 visit to Latvia)
a. preliminary remarks; (Read full CPT report) 28. One of the objectives of the 2022 visit was to examine the situation of foreign nationalsdetained under aliens legislation. For this purpose, the delegation visited the country’s two dedicateddetention facilities for foreign nationals, namely Daugavpils Immigration Detention Centre and Mucenieki Immigration Detention Centre.12 Both centres are managed […]
![](https://www.globaldetentionproject.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/10/Screenshot-2024-10-29-at-13-20-29-2023-16-inf-en-docx-pdf.png)
Malaysia: Covid-19 and Detention
On 20 April 2022, 528 Rohingya refugees–including 97 women, 294 men, and 137 children–escaped from the Relau detention centre in Sungai Bakap. According to a new local news agency, immediately before the escape there had been a “riot” at the detention centre. Most of the detainees were quickly re-detained, though seven–including three children–died while trying […]
![Group of Refugees Detained on the Side of the Road by Malaysian Police Authorities (New Straits Times,](https://globaldetentionproject.org:3000/api/gdpUploadFiles/sources/download/esods_1650422143.jpeg)
Ukraine: Covid-19 and Detention
Immigration Detention amidst War: The Case of Ukraine’s Volyn Detention Centre A Global Detention Project Special Report In early March, shortly into Russia’s war on Ukraine, the Global Detention Project (GDP) began receiving email messages and videos from individuals claiming to know people who remained trapped in an immigration detention centre inside Ukraine, even as […]
![Volyn PTPI (in Zhuravychi) (© Ukraine Ombudsperson via Right2Protect, https://r2p.org.ua/shho-take-ptpi/)](https://globaldetentionproject.org:3000/api/gdpUploadFiles/sources/download/volynskyj-ptpi-1648152543.jpeg)
Denmark: Covid-19 and Detention
Denmark has entered talks with Rwanda to establish a deal similar to the controversial one Rwanda made with the United Kingdom in mid-April concerning the transfer of asylum seekers to the country. Denmark’s immigration minister said that the deal would “ensure a more dignified approach than the criminal network of human traffickers that characterises migration […]
![Police Officers Walk the Danish-German Border (Claus Fisker/Scanpix Denmark,](https://globaldetentionproject.org:3000/api/gdpUploadFiles/sources/download/4GJ6CIA5EFISBP4LWUJDOFPFWI.jpeg)
Rwanda: Covid-19 and Detention
Despite having a much-criticised track record concerning its treatment of refugees, Rwanda has signed deals with both the United Kingdom and Denmark that involve receiving deported asylum seekers and irregular migrants from both the countries for processing and potential permanent relocation. In mid-April, Rwanda and the UK finalised an “economic development partnership” whose centrepiece is […]
![Outside of the Gashora Transit Centre (Sally Hayden,](https://globaldetentionproject.org:3000/api/gdpUploadFiles/sources/download/etm_gashoraa.jpeg)
United Kingdom: Covid-19 and Detention
UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson announced on 14 April that “from today, anyone entering the UK illegally as well as those who have arrived illegally since January 1 may now be relocated to Rwanda. Rwanda will have the capacity to resettle tens of thousands of people in the years ahead.” The UK claims that the […]
![UK Home Secretary, Priti Patel and Rwandan Minister of Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation, Vincent Biruta sign an agreement in Kigali on 14 April 2022 (Simon Wohlfahrt/AFP,](https://globaldetentionproject.org:3000/api/gdpUploadFiles/sources/download/rwandaukjpg.jpeg)
Colombia: Covid-19 and Detention
Colombia hosts the largest number of Venezuelans outside Venezuela. According to the World Food Programme, there are some 1.8 million Venezuelans residing in Colombia and another 500,000 are expected to arrive in the coming months. By 2020, according to UNHCR, Colombia had 957 refugees, 19,933 asylum seekers, 8,252,788 internally displaced persons, and 1,729,537 Venezuelans “displaced […]
![A Group of Refugees and Migrants Walks Towards the Village of Canaan in south Panama After Crossing the Darien Gap (Nicolo Filippo Rosso, UNHCR,](https://globaldetentionproject.org:3000/api/gdpUploadFiles/sources/download/DARIEN_GAP.jpeg)
Foreign nationals held under aliens’ legislation (from report of the European Committee for the Prevention of Torture 2022 visit to Poland)
1. Preliminary remarks; (Read full CPT report) 25. The border crisis between the European Union and Belarus, which had begun in the summer of 2021, saw thousands of people, mostly from the Middle East, trying to enter the European Union through Latvia, Lithuania, and Poland from neighbouring Belarus. In response to an unprecedented increase in […]
![](https://www.globaldetentionproject.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/10/Screenshot-2024-10-29-at-16-14-26-2024-10-inf-en-docx-pdf.png)
Spain: Covid-19 and Detention
Spain’s detention and removal operations have begun to return to normal operations after major disruptions caused by the COVID-19 pandemic, which had spurred the country to temporarily close all its detention centres shortly after onset of the pandemic in early 2020. Despite this, COVID continues to wreak havoc in detention centres even as the country […]
![Entrance of the Zapadores de València (M. Rodriguez,](https://globaldetentionproject.org:3000/api/gdpUploadFiles/sources/download/cie-zapadores.jpeg)