Serco
Corporations
[vid] The biggest company you've never heard of...
The men showed up in a small town in Australia’s outback early last year,
offering top dollar for all available lodgings. Within days, their company,
Serco, was flying in recruits from as far away as London, and busing them from
trailers to work 12-hour shifts as guards in a remote camp where immigrants
seeking asylum are indefinitely detained.
It was just a small part of a pattern on three continents
where a handful of multinational security companies have been turning crackdowns
on immigration into a growing global industry.
Especially in Britain, the United States and Australia,
governments of different stripes have increasingly looked to such companies to
expand detention and show voters they are enforcing tougher immigration laws.
Some of the companies are huge — one is among the largest
private employers in the world — and they say they are meeting demand faster and
less expensively than the public sector could.
But the ballooning of privatized detention has been
accompanied by scathing inspection reports, lawsuits and the documentation of
widespread abuse and neglect, sometimes lethal. Human rights groups say
detention has neither worked as a deterrent nor speeded deportation, as
governments contend, and some worry about the creation of a
“detention-industrial complex” with a momentum of its own.
“They’re very good at the glossy brochure,” said Kaye
Bernard, general secretary of the union of detention workers on the Australian
territory of Christmas Island, where riots erupted this year between asylum
seekers and guards. “On the ground, it’s almost laughable, the chaos and the
inability to function.” read more
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