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Mental Health and Well Being in BME Communities Event at Bradford Care Trust and Sharing Voices

Date: Wednesday 15 September
Time: 930 – 3pm
Venue; 245 Sunbridge Road Bradford BD1 2JY

Below is a letter from Simon Large regarding an event at which not only your presence is required but your voice and input.
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As you are aware there are many changes afoot particularly in health care services.
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IF you want a Central and East European voice and perspective this is the chance to try and influence the future provision.
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WE ALL have experiences, not always positive and certainly many do not have any cultural needs met.
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If you know others who might be willing to attend and make a contribution please please let them know, and me as we need numbers for catering purposes.
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IF WE DO NOT act NOW we then have no cause to complain in the future!!!!!

Since the launch of the Delivering Race Equality in Mental Health national programme 2005-2010, there has been a constant focus on ensuring services are delivered and developed in line with this national plan.  With the welcomed broadening of focus in our Single Equality Scheme to other equality strands it is important that whilst addressing the other key issues, we continue to ensure we are meeting the needs of Black Minority Ethnic communities across the range of our services.

To progress this agenda, an event entitled ‘Mental Health & Wellbeing in Black & Minority Ethnic Communities: Your Service in Your Hands’ has been organised in partnership with Bradford District Care Trust and Sharing Voices Bradford. This will take place on Wednesday  15 September 2010 between 9.30am and 3pm at The Venue 245, Sunbridge Road, Bradford BD1 2JY.

The aim of the event is to celebrate the current work established under Delivering Race Equality and to agree a shared vision with all our community stakeholders and partners in relation to the future agenda.

As part of this initiative, there will be a series of events over the coming year mainly focusing on Adult Mental Health services.  The first in the series will focus on psychological therapies and will be a catalyst for progressing actions from the psychotherapy local action plan.

Clearly this agenda needs to be owned and driven on a multi-agency basis and I would therefore like to extend an invitation to you and representatives from your organisation to attend.

There will be presentations from local and national experts and an opportunity for delegates to work in themed workshops around the four equality building blocks of: better information more intelligently used; appropriate and responsive services; community engagement and more culturally diverse and competent workforce.

This is an important event to help us develop jointly a course of action to embed the national race equality recommendations in delivering mental health provision for Black and Minority Ethnic Communities in line with identified local needs and I hope you will be able to attend.

Yours sincerely

SIMON LARGE

CHIEF EXECUTIVE 

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JAMAICAN INDEPENDENCE CELEBRATIONS

THE NEWBY SQUARE (aka The Red Ginn)

PRESENT THE ANNUAL JAMAICAN INDEPENDENCE CELEBRATIONS & FAMILY FUN DAY

Saturday 7th August 2010

At The Newby Square Community Pub 32 Bowling Old Lane, BD5 7TD

12pm until 8pm

Featuring

  • DJ MASSACRE
  • Children’s Bouncy Castle
  • Face Painting
  • Caribbean Food -  Jerk Chicken, Roast Fish, Curry Goat & Rice

AFTER-PARTY 10pm – 6am

  • DJs on the night
  • LORD GILLES – London & Special Guest DJs from Manchester & Bradford – All playing on Scorcher Sound

ADMISSION FREE

Tel: 07944 343213 for details

Jamaican Independence Celebrations 7th August

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Petition to grant Sanctuary for Estelle and Freddy

Friends of Estelle & Freddy are petitioning the Home Secretary Theresa May, to reconsider Estelle’s case and grant Estelle, Humanitarian protection.

Estelle and Freddy Petition
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Please print petition and return to:

 Friends of Estelle & Freddy
C/o Northern Refugee Centre
Scotia works
1 Leadmill Road
Sheffield, S1 4SE

My name is Estelle and I am an Asylum Seeker whose claim has been rejected. It’s a complicated story, but I have lost all my appeals because – I can’t prove I am a Lesbian.

My parents died when I was in my teens and my uncle took in me and my brothers.

I was seeing someone who I didn’t know was married to a man in the police. We were found by her husband one day, and I was arrested. In the prison cell, ‘to prove I was a woman’ I was raped, and tortured.  My uncle paid a bribe to get me released, and because we heard the police man knew where I lived, he took to my grandmother’s village to keep me safe. I became pregnant because of the rape.

One day my uncle came to the village and said the police man had found where I was and had made death threats. He paid an agent to get me out of Cameroon to somewhere safe where I could claim Asylum. He got me a passport in a false name and we travelled by plane and ferry and bus. I was 7 months pregnant when we left, and very travel sick and exhausted all the time we were travelling. I did not know where we were or what countries we were in. I relied totally on the agent to get me somewhere safe and to tell me what to do. I could only speak French and a little English when I left Cameroon.

When we got to the UK, I was so sick and exhausted the agent took me to a hotel so I could sleep and rest. Next day he gave me a paper with an address, took me to the streets and told me to find my way to the address and then he left me. He said I should show the paper to people to tell me where to go. The address was the screening centre for Asylum seekers in Croydon.

I was interviewed for a long time, and then I was sent to Barnsley to the Belmont Centre. It has been very hard as I knew no-one and I knew very little English.

I was given somewhere to live after a short time, and I had my baby, Freddy, after 2 months. I did not know what was happening when my waters broke – my neighbour told me I was going to have my baby – she has been very good to me and helped me, and a lady from Barnsley that I met has been very kind also, getting me baby clothes and things for Freddy.

For the last 14 months since Freddy was born I have had to learn to be a mother, look after me and Freddy, deal with my claim for Asylum, and I have learned English and computers.  People in Barnsley have been so kind. Because of the rape, I have had help from a Sexual Violence Counsellor, and she believes me and has given me a letter of support. She says:

“The Judge in making the finding not to allow Estelle to remain has said they do not believe her about her sexual orientation. Whilst at the same time agreeing she was raped and also agreeing that it would be extremely difficult for a lesbian to be accepted in her country of origin Cameroon. I have found Estelle to be consistent and honest in all her communications as well as consistent in relaying information about her life both here in the UK and in her country of origin Cameroon. It is difficult to understand how “the truth” involving a decision about something as unique as an individual’s sexuality can be taken. I understand recent research has found 98% of cases where sexuality as a factor are refused asylum.

Having worked with a number of victims of rape and sexual violence I have no doubt that Estelle’s account is true and I base this on her presentation and her recounting of her day to day experience coping with the impact of this serious trauma.”

My final appeal has been turned down as the judge does not believe I am a Lesbian. I chose to have Freddy even though I was scared – he is a good, beautiful child and makes me happy, even though the event that brought him to me was so horrible.  I do not know how I can prove that I will love women and not men, especially as I have Freddy.  I wish I could have spoken English myself when I was first interviewed – it was so hard to speak through an interpreter. Perhaps that is why they don’t believe me.
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I have turned down the offer of a voluntary return to Cameroon. I cannot go back there – I will not be safe. I have been told that Freddy and I will be forcibly removed. I am sick with worry all the time that someone will come for us at any time, or when I go to sign at the office in Sheffield they will keep me there.

Recent UK Government statement

Asylum
We will stop the deportation of asylum seekers who have had to leave particular countries because their sexual orientation or gender identification puts them at proven risk of imprisonment, torture or execution.

The UK is recognised as a world leader on LGB and T rights. While we will use our international status to influence other countries, encourage them to repeal anti-homosexuality laws and show further understanding of LGB and T issues, we are also aware that this will not happen overnight
(Working for Lesbian Gay Bisexual and Transgender Equality document, Government Equalities Office published 16 June 2010. See www.equalities.gov.uk)
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Notes on Cameroon
Same-sex sexual acts are banned by section 347 of the penal code with a penalty of 5 years imprisonment and a fine of 20,000 to 200,000 francs.  More severe sentencing is likely when one of the offenders is under 21 years of age.]

In May 2005, 11 men were arrested at a nightclub on suspicion of sodomy, and the government threatened to conduct medical examinations to “prove” their homosexual activity. As of February 2006, nearly all were still being detained, with trials scheduled in March 2006.]
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Cameroon is a conservative society. Homosexuality is frowned upon. In 2006, a number of tabloids published the names of at least 50 very prominent people they claimed were homosexual. They condemned them for deviant behaviour. The stories boosted newspaper circulation, but were criticized by the state communication council for invading people’s privacy. The campaign provoked a national debate about gay rights and privacy.  (Wikipedia June 2010)
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Friends of Estelle & Freddy are petitioning the Home Secretary Theresa May, to reconsider Estelle’s case and grant Estelle, Humanitarian protection.

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