Campaign: Stop the Deportation of Amdani Juma
Written by Mary on June 6, 2008 – 5:52 pm -
Description: Amdani Juma left Burundi during the 1994 Rwandan genocide. When he returned after the conflict he was held captive, beaten, and put under surveillance. He fled to Britain in 2003 and applied for asylum, which he was denied last December. He had become a pillar of the community in Nottingham, working for the Refugee Forum and setting up his own organization, the African Institute for Social Development. For this reason, people in Nottingham wanted him to stay in their community and started a campaign to fight his deportation to Burundi, which was scheduled for June 4th.
Digital Activism tools: several different blogs (including an official blog), Facebook group, citizen journalism, e-petition
How These Tools Are Being Used: Online tools are integrated with offline tactics and organizing to intensify the impact of the campaign. While the official blog is a center for the latest information on the case, including press releases, and the Facebook group draws in new members, offline actions, like a protest in Nottingham’s town center, bring attention to the injustice. The e-petition is used in the same way as the protest - to make a visual popular statement of support for Juma. Because the story was not being covered by the mainstream media, citizen journalists from the site Indymedia UK covered the story to raise awareness, as did bloggers.
Outcome: Juma’s deportation was moved back 6 days, to June 10th, though a final decision has not yet been made.
Tags: AmdaniJuma, asylum, britain, burundi, citizenjournalism, Offline, refugee, uk
Posted in Blogs, Campaigns, E-Petitions, Europe, Social Networks, Sub-Saharan Africa, Tools, Video | No Comments »

