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Independent Monitoring Boards’ annual report included an update on the Home Office’s one-in-one-out policy, finding that it had led to children being detained, which is not allowed. Photograph: Home Office/PA View image in fullscreen Independent Monitoring Boards’ annual report included an update on the Home Office’s one-in-one-out policy, finding that it had led to children being detained, which is not allowed. Photograph: Home Office/PA Staff at immigration detention centre wore England flags, report finds Chair of prisons and detention watchdog concerned about intimidating effect as wide-ranging and damning review published Staff at an immigration detention centre wore England flags pinned to their uniforms while guarding migrants, a report from the prisons and detention watchdog has revealed. Their use by staff at one of the Home Office’s short-term holding facilities to detain migrants is revealed in the Independent Monitoring Boards’ national annual report, published on Wednesday, which is based on 127 annual reports about different prisons, young offender institutions and immigration detention centres. The report from the interim IMB chair, Jane Leech, raises concerns about the wearing of St George’s Cross flags, which have become closely associated with far right and anti-migrant activists and groups including Raise the Colours. “The board felt this risked perceptions of bias or even intimidation among detained people, especially in the light of recent immigration protests in which flag displays were prominent. At a minimum the board concluded it raised concerns about professional standards and workplace culture,” it said. The report is damning about the state of prisons, immigration detention centres and young offender institutions, finding that there is a “consistent and deeply troubling picture” relating to prisons where “longstanding failures are not being resolved but are instead being compounded”. Corrupt Liverpool prison worker jailed for smuggling drugs and sending sex texts to inmates Read more The verdict on immigration detention centres is also critical, raising concerns about harm without accountability, use of force and failed safeguards. It finds “a troubling picture of systemic failings across immigration detention that continue year after year, exposing detained people to avoidable harm while falling short of the minimum standards that are meant to be upheld in detention.” The report provides the first overview from a watchdog about what is happening with the Home Office’s controversial one-in-one-out scheme to forcibly return some small boat arrivals back to France, in exchange for a similar number being brought legally from France to the UK. Of particular concern to the IMB is the unlawful detention of children for this scheme. According to the terms of the one-in-one-out agreement lone children must not be part of it. At Gatwick immigration removal centre 12% of those detained for one-in-one-out were age disputed with 2
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