1969 Laye Condé is born in Kabala/Sierra Leone as the first child of his family. He has several siblings. 2000 At the age of 31, he decides to flee to Europe due to the local political and socio-economic situation. 2001 Laye Condé arrives in Hamburg and is... Weiter
1991 In Bremen, police doctor Männche injects victims with emetics for the first time without an official order. 1992 The distribution of emetics is institutionalized by the Bremen coalition (Ampelkoalition: SPD, FDP, Green Party). Over the next three years, emetics... Weiter
Since 2005, every January 7, people gather to remember Laye Condé and the other people affected of the forced administration of emetics. This commemoration has always been an expression of protest. Early on, activists called for a place of remembrance. On the one... Weiter
The reason for this was a ruling by the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR). This ruling was won by a person from Wuppertal after years of legal battles with courts in Germany. The ECHR ruled that Mr. Jalloh’s rights had been massively curtailed by the... Weiter
Am 27. Dezember 2004 wurden dem aus Sierra Leone geflüchteten Laye Condé im Polizeipräsidium Bremen gegen seinen Willen vom Beweissicherungsdienst durch eine Nasensonde zwei Stunden lang mehrere Liter Wasser und Brechmittelsirup eingeflößt.
Zwischen 1991 und 2004 sind in Bremen in über 1.000 Fällen an Menschen im Polizeigewahrsam Brechmittel verabreicht worden.
Am 7. Januar 2005 starb Laye Condé an den Folgen der Brechmittelfolter.