The evidence I found raised very serious concerns. A lot more work needs to be done to show how extensive these cases are. Seven cases in the UK amongst 12,000 is just a drop in the ocean. But the people I met had very compelling stories, with evidence to back it up, and those stories were pretty similar. I think it's of great concern if the rehabilitation program was really a place where there was torture.
The ICRC had initial access, and then no access. The International Organization for Migration had some access in the latter phases. Some of the people I met had IOM cards. IOM's program is funded by Norway, Britain, and U.S. aid, and I think Japanese aid.
But none of the people who said they'd been tortured said they could actually say so to either ICRC or IOM. They said IOM did screening, and it was with an eye to resettling people, or sending them home from those camps. They drove them away from the rehabilitation centres. But the people I've met had been through so much harassment after they'd been released, and they didn't seem think that IOM was a place they could go for help.