NEWS
Somali parents in London
are sending their children to Africa to escape knife crime in the city - New
report
Hundreds of British
teenagers are reportedly being sent by their African parents to East Africa to
avoid knife crime in the UK, representatives of the Somali community say. Some
names have been changed to protect the identity of the interviewees.
"In those few
years I was doing my A-levels it was tough. Just seeing people being dropped
every other day, being stabbed," Yusuf tells BBC
Yusuf was born and
raised in London but moved to Nairobi after a close friend in his neighbourhood
was stabbed to death.
It is a decision an
increasing number of parents are taking, for their children's safety.
Of the 100 people stabbed to death in the UK so far this year, 8% were of Somali heritage, according to the Rise Projects which works with young British Somalis in north London.
Of the 100 people stabbed to death in the UK so far this year, 8% were of Somali heritage, according to the Rise Projects which works with young British Somalis in north London.
Jamal Hassan
mentors young men in London, many from Somali families. He explains parents
"want to protect that child by all means necessary".
"If it means
that child doesn't finish school, college, university or he will not have a
good job by the time you come for them the future is not really important.
"What's important is that child's life."
"What's important is that child's life."
One mother who had
sent her child to Africa told him she could now sleep at night, because she
knew any police sirens she heard were not for her son.
Jamal went to Kenya
as a teenager, when he says problems for him in London "were at their
peak".
He says there are
parallels with the present day.
"One of the
things I'll never forget, is the fact that when you walk in the streets in
Kenya you don't have to look over your shoulder. Here I could travel in and out
of the city, go and visit whoever I wanted, and it was good. I felt a sense of
freedom. But for these kids [in London that can be] life and death."
Others, such as
Abdul, who is in his early 20s, left London because they had started to get
into trouble with the police.
"When I came
here it was like a clean sheet," Abdul said. "No-one knew me, no-one
knows my history. There [in London], you have people that look like you going
after you. My mum feels I'm much safer here than anywhere else in the
world."
Parents say they do
not view the move as a long-term solution - some children stay in Africa while
others return.
The Foreign and
Commonwealth Office (FCO) advises against all travel to Somalia, including
Somaliland, and highlights a heightened threat of terrorism and kidnappings,
across Kenya.
But Amina sent her
15-year-old son to Somaliland, when she was worried about the new friends with
whom he was mixing.
In his year there,
she says he became a studious child again. He had even wanted to stay in East
Africa. But within 17 days of being brought back to the UK in November 2018, he
was stabbed four times.
"He's been
completely traumatised by the experience," she says.
"They damaged his bladder, his kidneys, his liver. He's got permanent damage. He was safer there [in Somaliland] than he was here… 100% more safe than in London."
"They damaged his bladder, his kidneys, his liver. He's got permanent damage. He was safer there [in Somaliland] than he was here… 100% more safe than in London."
The new mayor for
Islington, Rakhia Ismail - a mother of four who came to London from Somalia as
a refugee - believes that some areas of the city are unsafe for young people.
"Does the
parent wait for her child to be killed? Or does the parent take a decision -
quite a drastic decision - to take him all the way back to wherever that child
is from originally?"
She says she knows
families who are waiting for their children to finish primary school so they
can leave the UK. She estimates that out of every five Somalian families, two
are taking their children back home.
Dr Fatumo Abdi - a
mother of Somali origin - said parents were struggling to know how to react to
knife crime.
"This is not
something they've encountered before. But we know living here in Britain, the
context is Britain. This is a British problem and it's a problem that we've
fallen into. It's not the answer but these are desperate parents."
She believes
poverty, inequality and exposure to violence are big factors as to why young people
fall into criminality.
"Our
communities are living in very poor disadvantaged areas with poor educational
attainment. All these things affect how our children move through the
world."
Rhoda Ibrahim, who
runs the Somali Advice and Forum of Information, which supports Somali mothers,
says that as many of them have poor English, they are forced to take jobs such
as cleaning, which lead them to being away from their families for long periods
of time.
"When you get
sent back to your country by your parents, it's the worst feeling," says
Mohamed, who lived in Kenya for six and then nine months.
He was sent there
after being excluded and sent to a pupil referral unit when no other school in
his area would accept him.
"It feels like
you're going to prison, and your mum's the judge. You can't come back until the
judge has let you free. You have to show that you're good, you've
changed."
But he feels like
it has made him a "better person".
"I could have
been out on the streets right now selling drugs, but... the kids in Kenya put
school first."
SHARE THIS STORY
No comments:
Post a Comment
Thanks for your comment, keep reading our news and articles