It turns
out that the cartoons on the wall of the detention centre in Kent which a
minister ordered removed were originally installed by contracted support
workers. The ministry has stated that the artwork was ‘unapproved’, a statement
which at the least raises questions over the extent to which the daily activity
at the detention centre requires detailed ministerial involvement in all
decision-making. It’s arguable that making ministers take difficult decisions
on the colour schemes at various buildings might be better than allowing them
to spend their time taking more serious decisions, but a system which requires
reference up to ministerial level for decisions on decor is a system which is
essentially broken.
Many people, including a
number of Tories, have expressed their outrage at the removal of the cartoons
as a petty and cruel action directed at the children, but they’re missing the
point. The real target of the decision isn’t the children, but the staff. As history
teaches us, effective and efficient operation of detention centres requires the
staff to distance themselves from their charges; to treat them as numbers not
people. In this specific case, it requires them to look at vulnerable children
and see only undesirable aliens; treating vulnerable children as though they
are vulnerable children impedes their ability to do that. Bear in mind that the
logical and necessary outcome of current government policy is that the staff
will be required, by law, to be willing and able to forcibly place those
children on a bus, and then forcibly remove them from the bus to an aeroplane,
using whatever physical restraints are necessary in the process. That requires
a degree of detachment, not to say brutality, on the part of the staff which
needs to be inculcated and maintained. Drab paintwork is just a small part of creating
a culture and an attitude which enables that.
The real shame which we should
feel here isn’t about the painting over of a few cartoon characters, but about
the policy and its implications. To the extent that government ministers will
feel any regret, it’s about the decision being made public, not about the
decision itself; the policy is one that they are still pursuing with gusto,
knowing and understanding the implications in terms of the physical removal of
those children. The values of a country which can treat children in this way
are alien to me, and the enthusiasm with which so many support the policy of
deportation aggravates that alienation. These are British values of which I
want no part.
5 comments:
Excellent piece John. Will share.
Can't get the share to work.
Sorry, been out all day and unable to moderate comments. All my blog posts should be shareable - from what app are you trying to share it?
I am just on my computer. I usually just hit the FB sign.
I'm sorry, but I have no idea why that wouldn't work. But the blog post is also available on my Facebook page, and I know thta they can be shared from there.
Post a Comment