Transcript Slide 1

Youth on the Move:
former unaccompanied minors
removed to Afghanistan
Emily Bowerman
Our research
Broken Futures: Young Afghan asylum seekers in
the UK and their country of origin
• Background
• Methodology
• Field visit to Kabul
Research conclusions
• From looked-after child to failed adult asylum
seeker
• Youth pushed into negative decision-making
nexus
• ‘Safe’ return? Complex intersecting factors
• Targeted support essential
Key finding 1
Youth as distinct category
• Dichotomy between adult and child unhelpful
• Development of cognitive and emotional integration
processes
• Youth as special category in other sectors
• Exacerbating effect of displacement on transition to
adulthood
Key finding 2
Mental heath implications of ‘living in limbo’
•Long-term negative impacts on emotional and psychological
wellbeing
•Depression and self-harm
•Inability to engage with concept of future
•Vision of life reduced to survival strategies
“We are in a prison even if we look free… I don’t know what I can do. I don’t know.
Where can I go where they will let me have plans? Nothing is easy anymore, especially
not the future. At the moment I can’t do anything, I just walk around… there is nothing
to do. Really I have no hope.”
Key finding 3
Danger of youth as threat/youth as vulnerable
stereotypes
•Overnight transition from one stereotype to the other
•Our actions can actively push youth towards one of the
stereotypes we have wrongly created
“I feel so angry because there is nothing I can do… one friend told me I should
just go back and fight a jihad there because this country has given me nothing
in the end. I don’t want to do this, but you start to see why people feel so
hopeless, and also people do anything when they need to survive.”
Key finding 4
Acceptance of over-simplified paradigms
• Different agendas can lead to simplistic responses
• Although reality is more complex, it is often no less
compelling
• Youth pay the price for our acceptance of these oversimplified paradigms
Key issues on return
• Returned youth as empty-handed outsiders
• Psychosocial impact of UK/Afghanistan contrast – poverty and
insecurity
• Westernisation – perceived and actual
• Limited education and employment options – mismatched
skills
• Leaving again – at risk of exploitation
• Problems with anti-government groups
Our response
‘Youth on the Move’ programme:
• UK support component
• Mapping of organisations in Afghanistan
• Kabul-based Monitoring Officer
Interviews with former UASCs in
Afghanistan
“I’ve been thinking about my life and the future
– it’s just empty”
“Good things [about UK] are that I was able to study. The bad
thing was just being deported. I miss the UK now. Everyone there
is friendly and good. Also I feel angry at the UK because I went
on such a bad journey – I only came to the UK because of the
problem with my father and I am angry because they sent me
back here.”
Employment and money
“It’s not like in England… I am spending all my
money just to rent the room and pay for buses.”
“But this [construction work] is not really a
job…I am an IT man.”
Education
“It’s difficult to continue studying because I
don’t have money and any money I have to
spend to rent my room. I wish I could continue
because I like studying.”
Family and contacts
“I don’t want to make friends because if I make
friends I will have to sometime tell them my
story and I can’t do that.”
Being a returnee
“People think that you’re bad that you’ve been, come back, what
have you been doing.”
“I think it [current expensive accommodation] is the safest place
I can be because I trust the person. This is important when you
don’t know no one.”
“I don’t want people to find out about my story or get to know
me too well.”
Plans to leave again
“I want to go back to London, I can’t live here
any more. I can only stay if I find a good job,
otherwise I will try to leave again.”
Rahim
For more info contact Emily Bowerman at
[email protected]