Dozens of immigration detainees still held at Harmondsworth centre after disturbances

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Dozens of immigration detainees remain at a Heathrow centre where a disturbance broke out on Saturday after a power cut, despite a pledge from a government minister to have evacuated everyone by Saturday evening.

Immigration minister Robert Jenrick issued a statement undertaking to empty the centre of detainees by the end of yesterday.

In his statement on Saturday night Jenrick said: “There was disruption overnight at Harmondsworth immigration removal centre after a loss of power. Thankfully no staff working or individuals detained there were hurt, despite clear evidence of unacceptable levels of violence and disorder,” he said. “The priority now is to move people to other centres while engineers fix the power fault and repair any damage.”

However while some detainees were moved out on Saturday, dozens more remained according to some who spoke to the Guardian on the phone on Sunday morning.

“We continue to live in Harmondsworth in conditions which are not humane,” said one. “People are running out of credit on their phones and can’t contact their families. We haven’t been out of our cells for three days. They come to our cells to bring food to us and leave it on the floor as if we’re dogs. They are treating us like prisoners but we are not prisoners we are detainees.”

The detainee added that although power had been restored to his wing at the centre TVs had been switched off. Many detainees say that watching TV helps them deal with the stresses of being confined in a cell.

The decision to evacuate the centre was taken due to electrical problems which caused power cuts at the removal centre on Friday and Saturday.

The power cuts triggered a protest from some detainees on one of the detention centre wings who refused to return to their cells on Friday evening over the conditions they were being subjected to due to the power cut – no light, no heat, no running water, no hot food and no toilet facilities. A disturbance ensued and elite prison squads and the Metropolitan police were called to the scene to quell the protest.

Due to ongoing issues with the electricity supply Home Office decided to evacuate the centre and move detainees either to prisons or to other immigration detention centres.

Another detainee complained about conditions at the centre: “The cell emergency bells are not working so if someone dies behind a cell door nobody will know. The system has failed us. We need to know what’s going on but the officers say they don’t know. On Saturday we were asked to pack our bags but we’re still here. A lot of us have high anxiety problems. Being confined to a cell without being allowed to have a shower for the last three days and just staring at a blank TV screen is making me feel very claustrophobic. I feel like a hostage rather than a detainee.”

The Home Office has been approached for comment.

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