No one is illegal

No one is illegal is a loosely connected international network of anti-statism groups and religious asylum initiatives that represents non-resident immigrants who stay in a country illegally and are at risk of deportation. The network has started a campaign and held rallies to bring wider attention to the situation of refugees. The campaign initially began in Germany as No Person Is Illegal (German: Kein Mensch ist illegal or kmii) and has spread to other countries, including Canada.

No one is illegal logo
Demonstration against the jailing of 16 people during a training of FC Sans Papiers. Vienna, 2010
No one is illegal sticker in Dutch

Germany

History

No Person Is Illegal was founded in 1997 at the "documenta X" art exhibition in Kassel.[1] After a few weeks, thousands of individuals joined as well as the 200 groups and organisations that had joined them in appealing to "help immigrants begin and continue their journeys towards obtaining work and documentation, medical care, education and training, and to assure accommodation and physical survival" regardless of their immigration status. The founding followed the death of deportee Aamir Ageeb at the hands of the German Federal Police. In the wake of Ageeb's death, the "Deportation-Class" campaign set its aims towards airlines that took part in deportations. The campaign culminated in a 2001 online demonstration in conjunction with Libertad. No Person Is Illegal and "Deportation-Class" have drawn the attention of Germany's annual "Constitutional Protection Report" due to purported connections with "left-wing extremism".[2]

Switzerland

Switzerland Bildung für Alle (Education for All) organization has its own specific task which is attempting to achieve permanent legal stay for immigrants. the organization stated School for all like Autonome Schule (Autonomous School)

Autonomous School Zurich

Autonomous School Zurich is a school for all immigrants.

Canada

No one is illegal protesters at Occupy Vancouver in 2011

A NOII collective of organizations has been established in a number of Canadian cities, including Winnipeg,Vancouver, Toronto, Halifax, Fredericton, Ottawa, Montreal, and London. Activist Harsha Walia is an organizer for the Vancouver chapter, while Yanisa Wu, Kelly Campbell, Sherry Viloria, Evan Macintosh, Jayelyn Rae, Hazim Ismail, and Mitchell van Ineveld organize for the Winnipeg chapter.[3]

gollark: No.
gollark: There are strict rules about this.
gollark: You can't just harbinge chaos without a proposal.
gollark: Oh. Right. We don't have [DATA EXPUNGED].
gollark: ++delete this user

References

  1. "Sans papier". www.bok.net. Retrieved 7 May 2017.
  2. "Antirassismus". Innenministerium des Landes Nordrhein-Westfalen. Archived from the original on 9 June 2009. Retrieved 18 October 2011.CS1 maint: BOT: original-url status unknown (link)
  3. Sean Condon, "[megaphonemagazine.com/articles/680/from-global-action-local-motion-harsha-walia-seeks-justice-for-vancouver-newcomers From global action, local motion: Harsha Walia seeks justice for Vancouver newcomers]", Megaphone Magazine, 21 May 2013.
  • AutorInnenkollektiv (2000): Ohne Papiere in Europa. Illegalisierung der Migration. Selbstorganisation und Unterstützungsprojekte in Europa. ISBN 3-924737-49-5
  • cross the border (Hg.) (1999): kein mensch ist illegal. Ein Handbuch zu einer Kampagne. ISBN 3-89408-087-6
  • Gerda Heck: ›Illegale Einwanderung‹. Eine umkämpfte Konstruktion in Deutschland und den USA. Edition DISS Band 17. Münster 2008. ISBN 978-3-89771-746-6 (Interview heiseonline 10. November 2008)
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