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We have an impact! A summary of key SIP activities in 2023

The year 2023 marks the coming of age of the Association for Legal Intervention: we have been supporting people with refugee and migration experience for 18 years now. Our team currently consists of 29 employees and 25 volunteers who work every day to promote respect for the human rights of people on the move.

We have worked intensively over the past year. We provided free legal advice to more than 3,000 women and men. Several hundred of them benefited from our integration assistance. Indeed, we provided support to people in need in various places: at our office, in detention centres, reception centres, centres for refugees, courts, and public offices. We offered services face to face, by email and by phone, which enabled us to offer help to people in need from all over Poland. Hand in hand with migrants, we fought i.e. for their release from detention; granting of the refugee status, subsidiary protection, social benefits and compensations. We facilitated school enrolment of migrant children and opening of bank accounts. We actively opposed discrimination in the workplace, in access to benefits and services. We strived to monitor the constantly changing legislation and intervene whenever changes could infringe on the fundamental rights of new residents of Poland.

Below is an overview of what we have achieved in 2023 – what impact the Association for Legal Intervention has had on the lives of people with refugee and migration experience and, more generally, on the migration policies in Poland.

Thank you for believing in us and our mission – it is thanks to you that we can effectively fight for justice and respect for human rights. Enjoy your reading!

You can download the document as a pdf HERE.

Pushbacks on the Polish-Belarusian border

Pushbacks on the Polish-Belarusian border continued in 2023, while militarisation of the border area and the use of violence by uniformed services have intensified. Since 2021, at least 55 people have lost their lives on both sides of the border as a result of the anti-refugee pushback policy. Those who were ‘lucky’, arrived on the Polish territory injured, with fractures and frostbite. Even those who wanted to apply for asylum in Poland have been pushed back into the hands of Belarusian services.

In 2023, we continued to provide humanitarian assistance at the border and to conduct strategic litigation. We have successfully worked towards:

Detention and detention centres for migrants

In 2023, 2018 persons including 136 children were detained in detention centres for migrants. Last year was a record year in terms of the number of strikes that broke out in individual facilities. Two factors have increased the frustration of detained migrants, namely an increasingly difficult access to psychological assistance (in 2023 the Border Guard cut off migrants from external psychological assistance provided by independent psychologists) and insufficient access to information about the legal and factual situation of detainees (unlike in previous years, migrants currently detained in the centres do not speak the languages spoken by Border Guard officers on duty there). We are fighting, with legal tools, to improve the situation in the centres and for the detention to be used truly as a last resort measure. This year we succeeded in winning, among other things:

Support for people with migration experience

Our support is not limited to court proceedings. In various ways, we try to comprehensively support people with migration experience in regulating their legal situation, but also in building their lives in Poland. In 2023:

In total, as many as 53 of the people that we supported this year were granted refugee status or subsidiary protection and can start a new, safe life in Poland!

Full-scale war in Ukraine

Over the past year, our work with people who have fled the war in Ukraine has focused on supporting people from vulnerable groups and providing reliable, up-to-date legal information.

Children’s rights

Children – both those who are in the care of parents or other guardians and those who come to Poland unaccompanied – remain the most vulnerable group and are the most exposed to the negative effects of migration. SIP fights against the practice of placing children in detention centres (see above). We also contest deportations to the country of origin of children who, after a long stay in Poland, have no chance to cope with a new reality. We facilitate their access to social benefits so that they have the best possible conditions for development. At the Association, we strive to put children’s best interest and needs first.

Sharing knowledge and experience

In the second half of the year, we launched IMIG, an online legal support tool for migrants, available in four languages, which contains sample letters applicable in migration proceedings. The templates can be adapted to individual needs and then printed out, to be submitted to an administration or a court. The tool also guides people legalising their stay in Poland step by step through the relevant application procedure. It is being used both by people with migration and refugee experience and by individuals and organisations supporting them. In a few months of operation, more than 40,000 users have used the tool.

Advocacy for the rights of people with migration experience

We monitor and try to influence migration policy in Poland. In the past year, we issued 11 position papers and calls, alone and with other social organisations, pointing out to decision-makers the irregularities in the implementation of the legislation in Poland and suggesting legal changes to be introduced. Notably:

In January 2023, The Refugee Council , a community-led initiative was created within the Association. It aims to strengthen the voice, empowerment and self-determination of people with refugee experience and to represent the interests of this group at local authority level and in public spaces. In 2023, the Council has already issued 2 positions on the use of the hijab during the Wielkopolska police “Wolf-Ram-23” exercises and on the anti-refugee/migrant narrative during the Polish election campaign.


Challenges for 2024

In 2024, we will, of course, continue with what we know best: legal support for people with migration experience, whose rights have been violated. In addition to the ‘core’ issues, we also expect new challenges:

If you would like to support us our ongoing work on behalf of people with migration and refugee experience in Poland, you can do so HERE.

Thank you!

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