December 03, 2025

The 20-Year Settlement Rule: How Governments Steal Human Time and Dignity!

 


Time as a Human Right – No state has the right to steal decades of someone’s life!

Thirty-eight years ago, my mom and I arrived in Switzerland with two suitcases full of hope and absolutely no idea that it would take 15 years before we were allowed to live anything close to a “normal” life. Fifteen years of temporary documents. Fifteen years of not knowing if we would be allowed to stay. Fifteen years of learning a country we weren’t even sure would ever fully accept us.

This week, the British government calmly announced plans that would make 20 years of waiting the new normal for many people who come to the UK. Twenty years before permanent settlement. In some cases, even longer. On paper it’s called “earned settlement”. In reality, it’s the theft of a lifetime!

Let me translate the official language into something honest.

Right now, most people on a visa can apply to settle after five years. The new plan doubles that to at least ten. If you’re wealthy, an entrepreneur, or a well-paid doctor, you might still qualify earlier. But if you’re a care worker, a cleaner, a delivery driver, or any of the low-paid workers who actually keep the country running? You’re looking at 15 to 25 years before you can finally breathe - especially if you ever dare to ask for help in the form of benefits.

For refugees it’s even darker. Their status is set to become temporary, constantly reviewable, and their path to permanent settlement stretched to around 20 years.
Twenty years of living in a country that refuses to say, “Yes, you are welcome, Yes you belong here.”

What makes all of this even more obscene is the context. The same “mighty countries” that sign off on wars, arms deals, sanctions and interventions that shatter other people’s homelands now stand at their borders pretending to be shocked when human beings try to escape the wreckage. They light the fire - then complain about the smoke.

And when the survivors finally arrive, traumatised and exhausted, the answer is not sanctuary but decades of probationAs if war was not enough punishment, they add twenty years of paperwork, fear, and half or non-existence on top.

We all know that TIME is the most precious thing we have. That’s why we use time as punishment: when someone goes to prison, the sentence is measured in years. We instinctively understand that taking time away from a human being is one of the most serious actions the state can take. Migration policy pretends to be softer, more administrative. It isn’t!!!

Telling someone they must live ten or twenty years in limbo - unable to plan, afraid to travel, terrified of one rejected form - is a quiet, bureaucratic form of the same thing. It is stealing life. Not in one dramatic moment, but in thousands of tiny cuts:
every anxious night, every job you can’t accept, every goodbye you don’t dare say because you fear you won’t be allowed back in.

We lived through 15 years of this inhumane limbo once already. I wouldn’t wish it on anyone - not even my enemies. No one deserves to be treated like this. Watching a government propose it as standard policy, with a straight face, feels like being told that our suffering wasn’t a mistake, but a template.

So I want to ask a simple question: How many years of a human life does a government believe it owns?

If the answer is “twenty and more”, then let’s be honest: this has nothing to do with control, integration, or fairness. It is about reminding certain people - refugees, migrants, the poor, the brown, the disposable - that their time on this earth does not fully belong to them.  Why not? 

Who are you to decide who gets to live a normal life in dignity?
What gives the privileged the right to steal time from anyone?
What gives you the audacity to punish war survivors for decades?

This is a slap in the face of humanity - nothing less.

And that, in my view, is not just bad policy. It is a quiet, polite, well-dressed human crimeAnd sooner or later, those who design such cruelty will pay a price - if not in this lifetime, then in the next. Karma keeps the receipts. It never forgets.


December 02, 2025

Forgotten in the Rubble: Life Behind the Invisible Border in Gaza!

They came home to nothing!

They left their homes under fire, fled with what little they could carry. Now they return - or try to - to a place where everything has been erased. Where winter is approaching and the world has already looked away.

That’s the story of the people of Gaza Strip in 2025: uprooted, stripped, forgotten.

The Invisible Border

Journalist Jeremy Diamond of CNN has spoken of the mounting difficulties reporters face in fully accessing Gaza or showing what’s really taking place. According to Haaretz’s profile of Diamond: “He is one of hundreds of journalists battling Israel to enter Gaza and report independently.” 

In practice, this means large swathes of territory have become off-limits, not so much by a marked line, but by the logistics of war, control, destruction, and restricted access. Some have called this an “invisible border”.

For example: there are media mentions of a military buffer zone inside Gaza, altering access and shifting the geography of what can be seen. When you cannot get in, cannot properly see, cannot tell the story - then what happens to the people on the other side?

Home Gone, Future Gone

Many of these families have already been displaced once or many times. Then they returned. But what did they find? Rubble. Half-standing skeletons of buildings. Fields destroyed. Infrastructure gone.

A news piece from February 2025 describes returning families in northern Gaza:

“I pitched my tent on the rubble of my former home,” said Hassan al-Goulah, returning to the ruins of his neighbourhood. 

No job. No income. No school. No certainty. Winter is looming.
One recent report:

“It is dire. No proper tents, or proper water, or proper food, or proper money … We’re coming into winter soon … rainwater and possible floods … hundreds of tons of garbage near populated areas.” 

The Conditions: Winter, Displacement, Neglect

– Shelters: Many are living in tents or damaged buildings that won’t withstand cold, wind, rain. Existing basic dwellings are already worn out. 
– Food & income: With infrastructure destroyed and agricultural land ravaged, many have lost any means of livelihood. Food is scarce. Malnutrition and hunger loom.
– Medical & normal life: Hospitals struggle. Schools are closed or destroyed. Trauma, cold, exposure. The normal rhythms of life - routine, work, school, safe home - are gone.
– Return to nothing: The very act of “returning” should signal hope. But when you come back, there is no home. There is no safety. There is nothing.

Why the World Must Care

Because people being invisible doesn’t mean they are gone. Because those in power or the world at large may have shifted focus - but the crisis remains. Because it matters.

When winter comes and tens or hundreds of thousands of people have no proper shelter, when the world faces one of its most ignored humanitarian disasters, we need voices. We need awareness. We need to say: they’re still there, they still suffer, they’re still human.




This song was inspired by a report I watched from CNN correspondent Jeremy Diamond shortly after the so-called Gaza “peace plan.” 

In that segment, he described and documented what he called an “invisible border” inside Gaza - a shifting, unclear, military-controlled line that civilians cannot cross, even as they try to return to the ruins of their former homes. His reporting exposed how these unseen boundaries determine who can move, who cannot, and how little the outside world is allowed to witness. 

 Here is the video that sparked the entire idea for Invisible Borders: (If the Instagram reel does not load for you, you can open it directly in the app.)