A campaign with a difference: the British billboards celebrating mig..


News Stories, 20 May 2015

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(c) (c) Movement Against Xenophobia
The "I Am An Immigrant" poster featuring refugee Farasat Ahmed, who is a student and works as an ambassador for the Prince's Trust, inspiring other young people who find themselves excluded from work or education to rebuild their lives.

LONDON, United Kingdom, May 20 (UNHCR) - In recent weeks, commuters across Britain will have spotted a very different kind of poster on their way to work. The "I Am An Immigrant" posters have appeared at 400 tube stations in London and 550 railway stations across the United Kingdom.

Taken by Vogue photographer Philip Volkers, their subjects are the migrants and refugees who have made a positive contribution to their adopted nation, such as refugee Farasat Ahmed.

At the age of 18, Farasat fled Pakistan with members of his family and they have since been granted asylum in the UK. Farasat is now a student and works as an ambassador for the Prince's Trust, inspiring other young people who find themselves excluded from work or education to rebuild their
lives.

The other poster stars include a firefighter from Poland, a Kenyan deputy head teacher and a mental health nurse from Trinidad and Tobago. One of the country's leading human rights barristers, Sri Lankan-born S. Chelvan, also features. Together with UNHCR, he helped bring about a landmark
ruling in 2010, allowing two gay men from Iran and Cameroon the right to asylum in the UK.

The innovative campaign has been managed by the Movement Against Xenophobia (MAX), a network of more than 100 organizations, faith groups and individuals, with the joint aim of detoxifying the debate that surrounds immigration in the UK and championing the vital contribution of migrants and
refugees.

In the run up to the recent general election (May 7), immigration was at the forefront of campaigning, with the main national political parties all promising to tighten borders and control immigration. The recent tragedies in the Mediterranean have also pushed migration further to the centre
stage.

The posters are a powerful way of countering the predominantly negative rhetoric that characterizes much of the political debate, demonstrating that migrants and refugees are a valuable and contributing part of the fabric of British society.

The "I Am An Immigrant" advertisements are unique not just for being the first ever national campaign to celebrate immigration ahead of an election, but also because they have been funded by the British public.

An appeal put out on Crowdfunder was met with an extraordinary response, and has so far registered more than -L-54,000. There are even plans to roll the posters out across countries in Europe if more donations are received.

Habib Rahman, head of the Joint Council for the Welfare of Immigrants which coordinates MAX, said: "The extraordinary support we have received from ordinary people shows how fed up many are with the hostility and scapegoating experienced by immigrants. Thousands are saying they reject
intolerance and want to celebrate our diverse and inclusive society."

By Laura Padoan in London, United Kingdom