Reykjavík Grapevine - 29.07.2016, Blaðsíða 16

Reykjavík Grapevine - 29.07.2016, Blaðsíða 16
icelandb ybus.is BOOK ONLINE & GET SINGLE TICKETS OR BUS PASSPORTS? Travel around Iceland at your own pace from 2 days up to 2 months. Buy your Bus Passport or single ticket at the next booking agency or at www.icelandbybus.is Are Asylum Seeker Shelters Really Like Prisons? No, Actually: Prisons Are Better During our visit to the asylum seeker shelter at Grensásvegur, many of the residents there compared the place to a prison. This naturally raised the question: How does this shelter com- pare to Icelandic prisons, anyway? What about asylum seeker shelters in general? Fortunately, the Icelandic prison administration outlines in detail on their official site just what kinds of rights and privileges Icelandic prison- ers are afforded. We also confirmed these details with an official from the prison system. What we found is that, in fact, if these asylum seekers were convicts in an Icelandic prison, they would actually have more rights and privileges than they do in Grensás- vegur, and many other shelters. By way of a point-by-point compari- son, here is what we found: Receiving guests: Prison: Family may visit weekly; friends no more than twice a month, unless special circumstances arise. Those in "open prisons" can receive weekly visits from friends and family if circumstances allow. Asylum seeker shelters: No visitors allowed, whether friends or volun- teers. Government officials may visit if granted express permission from the Directorate of Immigration. Common areas: Prison: Prisoners do their cooking in a common kitchen, where they can meet and socialise with one another. Grensásvegur: There is no common area. Cooking is done in individual rooms. Asylum seekers who live on the same floor may visit each other, but those on different floors need a security guard’s escort. Other asylum seeker shelters do have common areas. Daily activities: Prison: All prisoners are entitled by law to take part in hobbies, exercise and sports as a part of their daily lives. Asylum seeker shelters: No such ser- vices are provided by these shelters. In fact, asylum seeker dorms that have opened at Bífröst University grant asy- lum seekers access to the library, but prohibit them from using the gym, hot pots or laundry rooms there. Work and education: Prison: Prisoners may attend classes or actively work, sometimes even out- side prison grounds, provided they meet the necessary requirements to do so. Asylum seeker shelters: Asylum seekers are prohibited by law from working, as they are not issued an Ice- landic identity number (kennitala). No classes are provided by immigration authorities. Healthcare: Prison: All prisoners are granted ac- cess to healthcare workers, including psychologists and addiction special- ists, and are allowed to see a prison chaplain, and be visited by the Red Cross and prison authorities. Asylum seeker shelters: Personal testimony the Grapevine has received from asylum seekers, and the per- sonal testimony of Icelandic health- care workers, has shown that access to healthcare is complicated and spotty at best. Naturally, the one big difference is that asylum seekers may leave their shelters during the day with little ob- struction save for possible curfews— but Icelandic prisoners may, under special conditions and circumstances, also leave prison grounds if they quali- fy to do so. At the same time, Icelandic prisoners have considerably more ser- vices and privileges afforded to them than asylum seekers. ANALYSIS The Reykjavík Grapevine Issue 11 — 2016 16 The geothermally heated beach of Nau- thólsvík experienced a mysterious jellyfish infestation that got so bad people were afraid to go in the water. Many of those who did got stung, prompting ambulance atten- tion in at least one case. Just as people were starting to come up with ideas as to what to do about this, the jellyfish just as mysteriously disappeared again. Maybe they were never there to begin with and this was all a mass hallucination. Cer- tainly wouldn’t be the first time. Good news, everyone! Our disgraced former PM Sigmundur Davíð Gunn- laugsson is back, and ready to run for office again. Despite having ducked under the radar for the past couple months in the wake of the Panama Pa- pers fiasco, he remains the chairper- son of the Progressive Party—a posi- tion he will likely run for again. He has also made intimations that the early elections he promised this autumn might not happen after all. MPs for the Progressive’s partners in the rul- ing coalition, the Independence Party, have on the other hand argued that it doesn’t matter what he says; we will have elections this autumn, probably in October. Your guess as to whether or not this will happen is as good as ours. In less joyful news, a shady Dutch cor- poration is hoping to build a private hospital in Iceland. Iceland, like most countries in the world, has a public healthcare system, so the idea of a private hospital here has raised seri- ous concerns. While those behind the project insist the hospital will be for foreigners only, and will therefore not have any impact whatsoever on the do- mestic healthcare system, the fact re- mains that it may siphon off doctors, nurses, and other professionals from our existing system, which is still in dire financial straits. The green light for the project has not been given by Icelandic authorities at the time of this writing. NEWS IN BRIEF CONT. Words PAUL FONTAINE Photo ART BICNICK Share this article: GPV.IS/HRT10
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