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Australian navy opens fire on refugee boat
By Mike Head
13 October 2001
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Australian Prime Minister Howards determination to keep
anti-refugee demagogy at centre stage in the campaign for the
November 10 federal election plumbed new depths this week when
the government ordered a naval warship to open fire on an asylum
seekers boat floundering in the Indian Ocean.
According to Defence Minister Peter Reith, the HMAS Adelaide,
a frigate, fired shots across the bow of the small vessel at about
7am last Sunday, demanding that it turn back from Australias
nearby Christmas Island and return to Indonesia. Other reports
indicated that a volley of some 40 rounds was directed across
the water toward the boat, an act of aggression calculated to
terrify its 233 passengers, who included 54 children and 42 women,
thought to be fleeing from Iraq.
The warships unprecedented actions were based upon new
laws, introduced with the support of the Labor Party opposition
just before parliament was dissolved for the election. They allow
the military to use force to turn back or seize boats, and block
any legal challenges.
News of the shots being fired was suppressed for three days.
From Sunday to Wednesday, the mass media published lurid reports
sensationalising the governments unsubstantiated claims
that 14 people, including children, had jumped off the unnamed
boat in a supposed bid to force the navy to rescue them and take
them to Australia.
Prime Minister John Howard and his senior ministers accused
parents of throwing their children overboard and declared that
he did not want people like that in Australia. Genuine
refugees dont do that, he insisted, making it crystal
clear that the government would block the passengers appeals
for asylum, determining in advance that they had no entitlement
to refugee status.
Ruddock feigned outrage, thundering that people arriving without
permission would not be permitted to intimidate the
government. On the basis that the asylum seekers were wearing
life jackets, Ruddock insisted they had a pre-meditated
plan to put us under duress. Right-wing columnists
chimed in, with the Daily Telegraphs Piers Ackerman
accusing parents of tossing little children into shark-infested
waters as a publicity-seeking stunt.
Not to be outflanked, Labor Party leader Kim Beazley threw
his weight behind the government, declaring that the asylum seekers
had committed an outrageous act. I absolutely
condemn the throwing of children overboard whatever point is attempted
to be made by that course of action, he said.
The story began to unravel when journalists and the UN High
Commissioner for Refugees asked the government for proof that
children had been thrown into the sea. Caught off-guard, Ruddock
initially denied the existence of, and then belatedly produced,
two naval photographs of people in the water. The hazy pictures,
splashed all over the front pages of newspapers on Thursday, proved
nothing. They showed six people, including two children, all with
their faces blocked out, swimming in water, wearing life jackets.
Who were these people? When and where were they photographed?
Why were they in the water? What happened before they got there?
Defence Minister Reith then entered the fray, declaring that
the navy had a video showing a parent pushing a child into the
sea. But he refused to release the video, initially citing operational
security problems and later claiming that it was an infra-red
video, and the navy was just testing the quality for reproduction.
He could not explain what prevented the navy from editing the
video to overcome any security concerns, nor why an infra-red
video would have been used during daytime. His spokesman lamely
told journalists that the minister was not a video expert.
The media were barred from interviewing the asylum seekers,
preventing them from answering the governments allegations.
Even naval personnel from the Adelaide were forbidden to
speak to reporters, including a naval publicity officer who witnessed
the incident.
In the midst of questioning, Reith and Ruddock eventually admitted
that the Adelaide had fired shots at the boat before the
alleged incident. This raised the obvious question: did the refugees
indeed jump overboard, but in an effort to protect themselves
from the navys guns? Were they reacting out of fear of being
shot? In reply, Ruddock claimed, without evidence, that the incident
happened some two hours after the Adelaide fired its shots.
Whatever the actual course of events, full responsibility for
any refugees throwing themselves or their children off the boat
lies squarely at the governments feet. Having set sail from
Indonesia, the asylum seekers had been at sea for two days before
being intercepted by the Adelaide last Saturday, some 150
kilometres from Christmas Island. Acting on explicit instructions
from the government, a naval party boarded the vessel and ordered
it to turn back to Indonesiain the full knowledge that the
Indonesian government had refused to accept them. The desperate
refugees, crammed aboard the tiny boat in the middle of the ocean,
were in a hopeless situation. Where were they supposed to go?
The next day the boat was fired upon. It again failed to turn
back and another boarding party tried to force it in the direction
of Indonesia. According to the government, this was when the refugees
allegedly threw themselves into the water. The boat then broke
down and began to founder, forcing the Adelaide to take
it under tow and head for the safety of nearby Christmas Island.
The governments response was furious. Howard immediately
ordered the Adelaides captain to cease towing the
ship and await instructions from the cabinet. Without any evidence
whatsoever, government ministers accused the refugees of deliberately
sabotaging the vessel. One can only assume that they did
sink the boat deliberately, Foreign Minister Alexander Downer
declared, because these people have behaved abominably from
the start.
Eventually, faced with the only alternativethat the refugees
be allowed to drownHoward and his associates ordered the
navy to load them onto the Adelaides deck. There
they languished for more than a day while the government searched
for somewhere to dump them.
Finally, the government of Papua New Guinea, an impoverished
former Australian colony, agreed to incarcerate the asylum seekers
in a hastily-built detention centre, in return for an initial
payment of $1 million, to be followed by more cash as required.
It now seems that the boats passengers will find themselves
imprisoned for six months or more in a former military barracks
on remote Manus Island, near the equator, some 400 kilometres
north of PNGs main island.
In the meantime, they have been off-loaded onto Christmas Island,
locked up in a corrugated iron hall, under intense security and
isolated from local residents, as well as reporters. Last month,
Christmas Island residents, the majority of whom are former Malay
phosphate miners and their families, expressed solidarity with
the 433 rescued Afghan refugees aboard the Norwegian freighter,
the Tampa, who were not permitted to set foot on the island.
Under the governments new laws, Christmas Island and other
offshore territories have since become excision zones,
removed from Australias migration zone.
Australias Pacific gulag
PNG is the third Pacific country in a month to be bribed or
bullied into becoming a holding pen for the Howard governments
unwanted asylum seekers. From the Indian Ocean to the South Pacific,
the region is rapidly becoming Australias gulag, with neighbouring
governments imprisoning thousands of refugees at Canberras
behest.
The government of the tiny Pacific Island of Nauru, with a
population of 11,000, has already committed itself to taking 900
asylum seekers from the Tampa and three refugee boats,
all intercepted by Australian warships in recent weeks. With Naurus
tent facilities at the point of overflowing, the Howard cabinet
is negotiating with the government of Kiribati, another small,
poverty-stricken Pacific state, to build a holding camp at a disused
military base. Nearly 200 Sri Lankan refugees remain in detention
on Cocos Island, an Australian territory in the Indian Ocean.
In just over a month, the Howard government has transformed
the navy into a refugee herding service, ordering warships to
seize one boat after another, load their passengers onto troopships
and force their prisoners onto isolated islands. Since the Tampa
crisis, six more boats have arrived, carrying more than 1,000
people. The latest, thought to hold than 230 Iraqi and Iranian
passengers, has been boarded by the HMAS Warramunga near
Ashmore Reef, off Australias north-west coast.
Throughout the course of the year, the Howard governments
electoral fortunes had received one blow after another, with major
losses in a number of state elections. The prime minister has
seized upon the boat people as convenient scapegoats
for the growing crisis in education, public health, housing and
job security and to divert attention away from the governments
own record. Having seen its opinion poll rating jump during the
Tampa affair, the government has cynically engineered each
confrontation, with the assistance of the media, and cranked up
its national chauvinist rhetoric.
For its part, the Labor Party opposition has lined up with
the entire sordid affair, continuing its bipartisan support for
virtually every attack on living standards, public facilities
and democratic rights launched by the Howard government since
the last election in 1998.
See Also:
Australian general election: Both parties
stoke anti-immigrant prejudice
[9 October 2001]
Why the Tampa refugees
should be free to live in Australia
[31 August 2001]
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