From Iceland — Another Asylum Seeker Attempts Self-Immolation At Red Cross

Another Asylum Seeker Attempts Self-Immolation At Red Cross

Published August 28, 2015

Andie Sophia Fontaine
Photo by
Julia Staples

An asylum seeker threatened to set himself on fire at Icelandic Red Cross offices today, protesting the length of time he has had to wait for processing.

Vísir reports that the asylum seeker, originally from Iran, arrived at the offices of the Icelandic Red Cross today and poured an undisclosed flammable liquid on himself, threatening to set himself on fire. The man first applied for asylum last March, and though he has not received an answer despite a regulation requiring one within 90 days, the Directorate of Immigration says this delay is due to the “poor mental state” of the asylum seeker and “the difficulties related to that”.

While the Directorate also pointed out that the man had been granted asylum “in another European state”, refugee rights activist group Ekki Fleiri Brottvísanir (“No More Deportations”) points out that the country in question is Italy, where refugee detention centres are already overcrowded and where authorities have been criticised for their asylum seeker policies.

In May 2011, another asylum seeker also threatened to set himself on fire at the Red Cross offices, also citing the length of time he had been made to wait for processing.

The Directorate said that while all available help will be given to asylum seekers having psychological difficulties, attempting to self-harm “will not influence the processing or final decision of his case”. Ekki Fleiri Brottvísanir criticised this response, saying, “Certainly it is good to encourage people to not set themselves on fire. But when it happens regularly, there is something wrong with the acceptance and treatment these people receive. We encourage the Directorate to stop making poor excuses and to stop deporting asylum seekers.”

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