17:01. An officer talking into a speakerphone tells us that the man is going to be released from the van on immigration bail and returned to his address. A cheer goes up. We can’t believe it. Patiently we wait for the police to follow through, but it’s another half an hour before the back doors of the van open, and a man emerges. He looks back at the crowd. The now 200 people gathered in the close erupt in joy. We won!
After the detainee is released and safely back inside his home, we wait a bit longer until the police leave. As they march out of the estate, a chant goes up: “Don’t come back to Peckham! Don’t come back to Peckham!” As the vans drive off around the corner, a journalist from The Telegraph in a suit and tie arrives on the scene, out of breath, and asks to speak to the “demonstration organisers”. He’s laughed off: no one organised this. This was the community who turned out – and we are all off to the pub!
This government doesn’t have our consent
It was the victory at Kenmure Street in Glasgow that inspired the anti-raids networks that led to this moment. People are standing up and resisting what this racist government is doing to our friends and neighbours – and to refugees and migrants alike.
It took just one person to notice a van and to put a call out to their friends. A handful of people took a stand and held that van in the close for 90 minutes. Five hours after the first text went out, 200 people filled that close and the man was free.
The day after the stand-off in Peckham, hundreds gather in Manchester and outside Brook House immigration removal centre at Gatwick to protest the government’s plans to remove asylum seekers to Rwanda. This government doesn’t have our consent. We don’t accept the hostile environment, and we will defend each other from attack.
The rhetorical campaigning and the legal challenges have their place. But when the government is refusing parliamentary scrutiny of its policies; when the Home Office breaks the law, day in day out; when Windrush elders are kidnapped in the dead of night and refugees are refused asylum – then peaceful resistance becomes necessary.
The government says it speaks for the people when it enacts draconian anti-immigration policy. It says “the public” want it to raid people’s homes, to rip up families, to detain and deport people [editor’s note: a Home Office spokesperson told openDemocracy that obstructing immigration enforcement teams would “not deter them from undertaking the duties that the public rightly expect them to carry out”]. We know this isn’t true.
When my neighbour was being kidnapped from his house by the Home Office, I did something. Along with other people from south-east London, I stood firm by my beliefs and I stopped a man from being forcibly taken from his community. We won’t be the last to do something.
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