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'Inhumane' Asylum Payment Card

posted: 08/11/2010

Azure Card used to pay all refused asylum seekers, for use in limited supermarketsFour leading refugee organisations criticise the Azure payment card used to pay asylum seekers because it leaves so many living in hunger and deprivation.  The Azure card problems affect people with HIV. The new report, Your inflexible friend: the cost of living without cash, shows the many problems people face when you have no cash and are given no change.
 

 

 

The Azure payment card was introduced at the end of 2009 and the card replaced the system of supermarket vouchers for asylum seekers.

The card is topped up weekly (but only with £35 income for a single person) and can be used only in certain supermarkets. You cannot get cash, be given change, and anything over £5 that you do not spend by the end of the week is taken back from you.
 

Cash-less hassle
Without cash,

  • over half (56%) could not pay for travel to see their legal advisers, or attend essential health appointments (53%)
  • 40% could not buy food for their dietary, religious, or cultural requirements from the allowed supermarkets, and many go hungry as a result
  • 39% believed the supermarkets do not give the best value for money, and say markets or charity shops offer a better deal
  • 60% had problems with the card not working, including 13 people with children
  • 79% reported that the shops had refused the card
  • 56% reported anxiety and shame when using the card

The findings confirm the concerns raised by the organisations when the payment card was first introduced in 2009, and that asylum seekers living on this type of support continue to live in deprivation as a result of the card.
 

Jonathan Ellis, Director of Policy and Development at the Refugee Council said: “Our evidence proves the failings of the new Azure card are forcing asylum seekers into hunger and hardship. Their survival relies on a payment system that not only hugely restricts where, when, and what they can shop for, but often does not work at all. People, often with babies and young children, are in many cases just waiting to return to their countries as soon as they can, or cannot return because it is still unsafe. They have no choice but to remain here temporarily, and are not allowed to work to support themselves. It is therefore unacceptable that they are unable to buy items that meet their basic needs, and that they have to face hostility in shops when they use these cards.
 

People need cash not plastic

The government is reviewing the asylum and immigration system and must use this opportunity to end this inhumane system now, and offer asylum seekers cash as an alternative. Though levels of support are still too low – at just £5 a day - a simple cash support system would give people the freedom to spend the money as they wished, while allowing people to live with dignity until they can return home.
 

Your inflexible friend: The cost of living without cash
 


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Our OnlineShop Opens

posted: 28/10/2010

25th anniversary George House Trust enamel lapel pin badgeOur webshop has opened and our 'limited edition' 25th Anniversary badges are a bargain at £2.50.

To mark our 25th Anniversary, George House Trust released these limited edition pin badges, to help raise funds to support our work.

Limited 'bling' edition

They feature the attractive George House Trust logo, designed by one of our own advisers and these badges have been produced in a limited edition of only 1,000 with flashes of coloured enamel.

Priced at £2.50 (including postage and packaging). Now’s your chance to own a little bit of George House Trust history! Wear it with pride and show your support.

Visit our online shop and buy a bling pin badge 


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Want to Have a Say?

posted: 11/10/2010

smart thinker - graphic of side veiew of head with coils of interesting ideas for a brainGeorge House Trust wants four people to join our SMART group to have a say about our services. The deadline for applying is Monday 1 November.

We believe involving people with HIV in our services is really important. As part of our Service User Involvement Strategy, our SMART group, the Service Monitoring and Review Team, is a key way for people to have a real say in our services.

African and gay men wanted especially

SMART is a team of 16 people who use George House Trust services. SMART reports directly to the Board of George House Trust. We want 4 people to join SMART and we particularly want HIV positive African and gay men to apply, as both of these are under-represented on SMART.

SMART group meets every 2 - 3 months. You will be sent copies of papers to read and think about before the meeting. SMART meetings discuss all aspects of our services. SMART agrees a work plan for what we will discuss each year.

What does SMART do?
SMART involves people with HIV who use services to examine how we deliver services and suggests ways to develop and improve services.

Why get involved?
SMART is one way to be more involved in George House Trust and put something back. Involvement informs you about service delivery and developments as well as how we monitor and evaluate services. Becoming involved in SMART builds your skills and experiences.


What skills and experience do I need to join SMART?

Here are the things we expect of people in the SMART:

  • Ability to maintain confidentiality and keep our ground rules at all times
  • Being committed to service user involvement and providing feedback
  • Making the time to read all the papers before the meetings
  • Interested in all services George House Trust provides
  • Being committed to working together as part of the SMART team
  • To broadly support the work of George House Trust


Deadline: applications must be returned to Lynda by Monday 1st November .

SMART application pack

  1. Information and what we are looking for
  2. SMART Terms of Reference
  3. Application form

Information from and applications to Lynda Shentall, Director of Services by email or phone 0161 274 4499 


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Laws Should Not Worsen HIV

posted: 02/07/2010

The ‘Vienna Declaration’  sounds like a half-forgotten piece of school history, but it is brand new and all about ending laws and policy across the world that cause HIV harm. The UN has at the same time set up a brand new Global Commission on HIV and the Law  to deal with some of the toughest issues in HIV. Laws and policies across the world are making the HIV epidemic worse and causing harm to many people. Anti-gay, anti-sex-worker, anti-drug, anti-HIV sex and transmission laws and policies are all the UN Commission’s new battle-ground.
 

If you agree that the law should not criminalise drug users because this makes the HIV epidemic far worse and causes more harm than good, you are invited to sign the Vienna Declaration. The Vienna Declaration is a call from the international scientific community to countries across the world (including the UK) to face the facts and recognise that the so-called 'War on Drugs' isn't working, and causes far more harm than good, particularly in the fight against HIV.

It asks the UN and countries to update drug policy and laws to end this HIV harm, discrimination against people's human rights, and to remove the legal and other barriers to effective HIV prevention, treatment and care.
You can read and sign the Vienna Declaration here  and facebook and twitter it from there
 

Why is the Declaration from Vienna? Well, the International AIDS Conference opens in Vienna in Austria later this month.

This conference is the largest HIV conference, and is held every two years, and is the one where big HIV news on treatments and almost everything else is revealed. 

New - Global Commission on HIV and the Law
The Global Commission on HIV and the Law was set up last month – the secretary general of the UN said “I urge all countries to remove punitive laws, policies and practices that hamper the AIDS response … . Successful AIDS responses do not punish people; they protect them … . We must ensure that AIDS responses are based on evidence, not ideology, and reach those most in need and most affected.”

The Commission has a challenging job – its job is to produce practical steps, based on evidence and that support human rights, that will reduce HIV transmission caused by laws and policies. So it will focus its efforts on ending laws that criminalise HIV transmission and exposure, illicit drug use, sex work, and same sex relationships. Global Commission on HIV and the Law
 

HIV and the Law is part of the Law on Trial  season at Birkbeck College this weekend, and Matthew Weait, a long-time ally of George House Trust and who works at Birkbeck as a senior law lecturer, writes about how the law should not worsen HIV discrimination and stigma, and if laws do this they do not deserve our support.

 


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More Hepatitis C and HIV

posted: 22/06/2010

Hepatitis C in the UK: 2009 report is the latest update on the hep C virus from the Health Protection Agency. Figures from this yearly report show that laboratory reporting of newly diagnosed hepatitis C infections in England increased in 2008 by 6% compared to 2007, with 8,196 new cases reported in 2008.

Hepatitis C is rising among among people living with HIV, particularly gay men. Among gay men living with HIV hep C is sexually transmitted. Hep C has serious health impacts, shortens life expectancy and is harder to treat for people with HIV. Hep C treatment takes at least 6 months and has unpleasant side effects, and the success rate is much better when it is treated at an early stage. The largest number of people with and at risk of hep C howeer are injecting drug users.

Hepatitis C in the UK 2009 report and slide set
More news and information on Hepatits C and gay men living with HIV

 

1 in 73 Injecting Drug Users have HIV
The Health Protection Agency (HPA) has also published 'Shooting up: infections among injecting drug users in the United Kingdom 2008. An update: 2009’.

Key findings of the update include: transmission of HIV and hepatitis C infection through injecting drug use remains higher than in the late 1990s - overall, around two-fifths of injecting drug users are now infected with hepatitis C, and about one in 73 with HIV.
 
 


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