Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
06NICOSIA912
2006-06-15 08:33:00
CONFIDENTIAL
Embassy Nicosia
Cable title:  

ASYLUM SEEKERS PROTEST FOR RIGHTS IN CYPRUS;

Tags:  PHUM CY 
pdf how-to read a cable
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FM AMEMBASSY NICOSIA
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC IMMEDIATE 6198
INFO RUEHAK/AMEMBASSY ANKARA PRIORITY 4665
RUEHTH/AMEMBASSY ATHENS PRIORITY 3608
RUEHLO/AMEMBASSY LONDON PRIORITY 1204
RUEHVI/AMEMBASSY VIENNA PRIORITY 0481
RUCNDT/USMISSION USUN NEW YORK PRIORITY 0565
RUEHBS/USEU BRUSSELS PRIORITY
C O N F I D E N T I A L NICOSIA 000912 

SIPDIS

SIPDIS

E.O. 12958: DECL: 06/03/2016
TAGS: PHUM CY
SUBJECT: ASYLUM SEEKERS PROTEST FOR RIGHTS IN CYPRUS;
IMMIGRATION REFORM BADLY NEEDED


Classified By: Ambassador Ronald L. Schlicher, Reasons 1.4 (B) and (D)

C O N F I D E N T I A L NICOSIA 000912

SIPDIS

SIPDIS

E.O. 12958: DECL: 06/03/2016
TAGS: PHUM CY
SUBJECT: ASYLUM SEEKERS PROTEST FOR RIGHTS IN CYPRUS;
IMMIGRATION REFORM BADLY NEEDED


Classified By: Ambassador Ronald L. Schlicher, Reasons 1.4 (B) and (D)


1. (C) Summary: As Cyprus struggles with a large influx of
asylum sekers who have put a major strain on the limited
facilities of this small country, NGO advocates contend that
the situation for asylum seekers is increasingly desperate
and that the GOC continues to deny them rights to which they
are entitled under Cypriot law and EU directives. Over the
last two months, asylum seekers in Nicosia have held a series
of visible and sometimes dramatic demonstrations to protest
this. The UNHCR representative in Cyprus, Christina Planas,
told us on June 9 there was little she could do for the
asylum seekers but UNHCR would continue to advocate for
improved GOC immigration procedures. In May, illegal
immigrants set fire to their detention cells in protest of
their long imprisonment, sending five detainees and two
police officers to the hospital. This was followed by
suicide threats, hunger strikes, sit-ins, and marches of up
to 800 people. On May 25, the government finally offered
full benefits to 100 demonstrators camped on the premises of
the local Red Cross. Just one week later, detained illegal
immigrants began a new hunger strike that is still ongoing.
On June 8, 20 Iraqi asylum seekers began a sit-in in front of
the U.S. Embassy to request help in obtaining information on
welfare benefits from the GOC. International human rights
observers note that Cyprus's lack of immigration
infrastructure has made the situation untenable. The Cypriot
public, however, has demonstrated little sympathy for the
plight of the asylum seekers. End Summary.

RIOTS, SUICIDE THREATS, HUNGER STRIKES
--------------


2. (U) Tensions between asylum seekers and the GOC have
escalated strongly, beginning with a May 4 riot in Cyprus,s
Block 10 police detention cells of the Central Prison that
put five detainees and two police officers in the hospital.
Sixty Asian and Middle Eastern inmates set fire to their
cells in protest of their long imprisonment (some have been
held in short-term cells for over 20 months). In response,
approximately 200-600 asylum seekers and their families from
Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, Iran, Iraq, the Palestinian Authority
and Syria expressed their support for the detainees by

camping in front of the Nicosia municipality to protest what
they said was the denial of their human rights. The same
week, another 150 asylum seekers marched on the Presidential
Palace, complaining of poor living conditions, police abuse
and racism.


3. (U) When these events yielded little official attention,
four Kurdish asylum seekers threatened to jump from a
seven-story building in downtown Eleftheria Square if the
government did not grant them resident permits. As a result,
AKEL MP Eleni Mavrou secured a meeting for them with House
President Demetris Christofias and a statement of support
from the UNHCR. The asylum seekers complained of arbitrary
arrests, threats of deportations, imprisonment, racism, the
illegal denial of state welfare and medical benefits, and a
lack of access to employment and housing. They emphasized
that no government body independent of the police examined
their cases and that they did not have access to lawyers and
translators who were not connected to their embassies.


4. (U) Christofias provided assurances that he would take
their concerns to the government, but the protesters remained
in Eleftheria Square. On May 14, 800 demonstrators
(according to estimates from Doros Polycarpou, director of
the NGO "KISA" - Action for Equality, Support, and
Anti-racism),including asylum seekers and a few sympathetic
Cypriots, marched on the Central Prison. When further talks
with Interior and Labor Ministry officials broke down, ten
Syrian Kurds began a hunger strike. The 100 or so asylum
seekers remaining in front of the municipality moved their
tents to the premises of the Red Cross, where they stayed
until the government gave in on May 25. Polycarpou told us
that the GOC agreed to grant certified documents such as
residency "pink slips," health cards, Alien Registration
Cards, housing, and welfare benefits -- but only to the 100
Syrian Kurds who remained at the Red Cross. Finally, the GOC
agreed to release a Pakistani immigrant who had been arrested
during the protests.


5. (C) Polycarpou observed that the agreement was obviously a
temporary fix and did nothing for the other 10,000 asylum
seekers remaining in Cyprus without benefits. On June 2, the
illegal immigrants in Block 10 began a new hunger strike that

is still ongoing. On June 8, a group called "Youth Against
Nationalism" circulated an email letter of protest to the
government, claiming that it had not made good on its promise
to the asylum seekers at the Red Cross. Christina Planas of
the UNHCR told us there was little her office could do but
she would continue to advocate for improved GOC immigration
procedures and respect of EU directives (which, she
commented, the GOC was clearly ignoring). Planas said she
had only received one complaint -- from a family that had
been camped at the Red Cross -- but that indeed, they had not
yet been granted benefits, and that the Larnaca asylum office
had told them "it did not have time for them."


6. (C) On June 8, 20 Iraqi asylum seekers claiming to have
been in Cyprus for over five years began a peaceful protest
in front of Embassy Nicosia. They pitched tents and claimed
that the government welfare services would not even tell them
if they were eligible for benefits. Georg Siep of the UNHCR
told us that as asylum seekers or as individuals eligible for
"subsidiary protection," the Iraqi protesters were entitled
to government benefits. On June 13, the Cypriot police
removed the demonstrators, but they immediately returned.

NO IMMIGRATION INFRASTRUCTURE A BIG PROBLEM FOR LITTLE CYPRUS
-------------- --------------


7. (U) Cyprus has seen an explosion of asylum applications
in recent years. From 2000-2004, Cyprus received the largest
number of asylum applications per capita of any country in
Europe (22 applicants per 1,000 inhabitants). In 2005, over
6,000 new applications were filed. The Labor Ministry
reported in May that at least 10,000 applications were still
pending, despite the fact that the vast majority are
rejected. Current law dictates that asylum applicants may be
employed only in agriculture, but agriculture accounts for
only 3.9% of the economy and cannot accommodate the growing
number of asylum seekers. Doros Polycarpou has repeatedly
told us that asylum seekers with pending applications are
legally eligible to receive government welfare benefits in
the approximate amount of CYP 200/month (for an individual)
if they cannot find employment, but that there are several
problems with this. First, the GOC refuses benefits if an
asylum seeker is offered a job but turns it down (some say
they cannot perform agricultural work, or that the work is
located in rural areas while their families are in the
cities). Second, asylum seekers report that collective
agreements establishing the minimum agricultural wage of CYP
365/month are not enforced, and that employers illegally
deduct food and lodging from their pay. In 2005, the
government recognized 25 asylees and paid welfare benefits to
319 asylum seekers in the amount of CYP 1.39m.


8. (U) Existing EU directives on asylum dictate that it is up
to member countries to decide how and under what conditions
to grant work permits to asylum grantees. In December 2005,
the GOC began implementing a new directive to expedite the
application process for asylum applicants, but delays remain.
Polycarpou has complained that the directive does not allow
adequate time for the proper investigation of cases and
rather, that it paves the way for more expedient deportations
and increases the danger of refoulement to third countries.
As a result of the recent demonstrations, Planas said the
UNHCR has offered its assistance to the GOC to set up a
system to manage applications and improve social integration.

THE IRANIAN DILEMMA
--------------


9. (U) Among the asylum seekers detained in Cyprus's Block 10
holding cells attached to the central prison, the government
has held 26 Iranians for over ten months. The Cyprus police
have confirmed that at least one of them injured himself
deliberately during the last year (another Iranian whose
application was denied attempted suicide, though he was not
in custody; and an Iraqi detained for several months also
attempted suicide). The Justice and Interior ministers have
admitted publicly that the detention cells are overcrowded
and unsuitable for detaining illegal immigrants.


10. (U) The GOC says it cannot deport the Iranians because
they do not hold genuine travel documents, and that the
Iranian government is not interested in repatriating these
citizens. The press reported on May 12 that a Cypriot
diplomatic delegation would be traveling to Teheran soon to
develop paperwork to ease the deportations. The GOC says
that unclaimed Iranian asylum seekers are a problem faced by

other European countries as well and that Teheran has failed
to engage on the matter.

INTERNATIONAL COMMUNITY TAKING NOTE
--------------


11. (U) Two reports from international groups commenting on
the treatment of immigrants and asylum seekers were released
during the two-week protest, lending credibility to the
demonstrators, claims. The Council of Europe,s European
Commission against Racism and Intolerance (ECRI) report of
May 12 said that Cyprus,s continuing lack of a comprehensive
immigration and integration policy had resulted in the
particular vulnerability of immigrants to human rights
violations, exploitation and discrimination. It also said
that the extensive use of detention and the ill treatment of
immigrants and asylum seekers was a concern. On May 23,
Amnesty International released its 2006 report on Cyprus,
saying that foreign nationals here had been unlawfully
expelled, arbitrarily detained and ill-treated in police
custody.

COMMENT
--------------


12. (C) Cyprus is wrestling with many of the same questions
surrounding immigration and asylum that bedevil other EU
member states. The classic Cypriot response to this kind of
problem is to do nothing, especially if doing something might
have the twin undesirable effects of increasing Cyprus's
attractiveness as an asylum destination and putting more
pressure on GOC budgeteers who are trying to reduce outlays
to meet Eurozone requirements. Much of the frustration
building among asylum seekers and would-be immigrants in
Cyprus is that they simply cannot get any kind of response --
even a negative one -- from the government. The Cypriot
public, meanwhile, has demonstrated little sympathy for the
asylees. It is likely that the GOC will take meaningful
steps to streamline its immigration and asylum procedures
only under sustained pressure from the EU.
SCHLICHER