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Growing protests against Australian refugee detention camps
By Jake Skeers
13 April 2002
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Nearly 50,000 people have joined rallies across Australia in
recent weeks against the Howard governments policy of incarcerating
asylum seekers. More than 3,000 detainees, many facing severe
psychological trauma and health problems, are currently being
held in prison camps, both within the country and on remote islands
in the Pacific and Indian oceans.
Close to 15,000 people marched in a Palm Sunday rally through
Sydneys inner city on March 24. Broad layers of middle class
and working class people participated, spanning all age groups.
Many had never attended a demonstration before. Trade union, immigrant,
radical, Christian and Muslim groups supported the rally. In Melbourne,
more than 20,000 walked through the streets, while smaller protests
were held in other cities.
The following weekend, around 1,000 protesters travelled in
buses and four-wheel drive vehicles and camped near the Woomera
detention centre in the South Australian desert. Another 700 people
marched on Sydneys Villawood detention centre, tying balloons
with slogans to the outer fences. In Melbourne, 600 attended a
Passover vigil protest at Maribyrnong detention centre, organised
by a Jewish refugee group. Speakers at the rally drew parallels
between the turning away of boatloads of Jewish refugees during
the 1930s and the governments current treatment of refugees.
Rally participants condemned the government for breaking international
laws, such as the Convention on the Rights of the Child and the
Universal Declaration of Human Rights, in its treatment of detainees.
In Easter sermons, several Christian bishops made a point of criticising
the detention of children.
Numerous medical and professional groups have also expressed
opposition to the governments policy. In February, the Public
Health Association of Australia, the Australian Hepatitis Council,
the Medical Association for Prevention of War, the Australian
Nurses Federation (Victoria) and six other groups published a
statement in a major Australian newspaper. Signed by 600 individual
members, the statement accused the government of contravening
international human rights law and of administering the antithesis
of good public health policy in the Nauru and Manus Island
detention camps. It called for the immediate release of all detainees.
Health professionals have raised particular concerns about the
mental and physical health of children in detention.
At present, 125 children are incarcerated in the mainland camps,
out of a total detainee population of 1,531. With no time limit
on detention, the government has held many refugees for more than
three years. An unknown number who have had their visa applications
rejected are stranded in detention indefinitely because the government
is unable to deport them to certain countries, including Iraq
and Iran.
Since July 1, the numbers in detention within the country have
dropped from 4,182, largely because the government has used the
navy to block asylum seekers reaching Australian shores. Warships
have turned some boats back to sea, while 1,155 refugees have
been forcibly transported to an Australian-financed camp in Nauru.
446 asylum seekers have been forced onto either the malaria-prone
facility on Papua New Guineas Manus Island or the offshore
Australian camp on Christmas Island. Together, the island camps
hold 376 children.
Woomera, which has seen detainee protests, hunger strikes and
mass breakouts since it opened in 1999, holds about 300 asylum
seekers, down from 1,000 nine months ago. During the Easter weekend,
it became the focus of the national demonstrations.
Woomera protest
Protesters began to arrive at Woomera on March 28, pitching
tents one kilometre from the detention centre. Protests of this
size have not occurred there before, because of the centres
isolation. It lies some 500 kilometres from the nearest major
cityAdelaide. The federal government has established an
exclusion zone around the centre, which is part of a former rocket
testing facility.
On the first night, police pushed over a number of tents and
scuffled with protesters, attempting to force them away from the
camp and into the Woomera township. On Good Friday, the next night,
1,000 people walked past a police barricade and toward the detention
centre, holding a banner to give to detainees.
Upon reaching the perimeter, protesters climbed onto the five-metre
high, outer barbed-wire fencing, which began to give way. They
dismantled a section of the fence and many walked through to the
inner fence to speak and shake hands with around 80 detainees.
The detainees and demonstrators started chanting freedom
and ACM, immigration mafia, directed against Australasian
Correctional Management, the company that runs the detention centres.
Several detainees cut themselves trying to climb over the razor
wire-topped fencing. In the meantime, other detainees loosened
a metal slat in the fence.
Fifty detainees, including four children, jumped through the
fence and over a line of police into the crowd of protesters.
One woman yelled, Freedom! Freedom! as police tackled
her to the ground. Protesters struggled with the police and were
able to free her. Another detainee ran out shouting, After
two years Im free. Some protesters swapped clothes
with detainees to disguise them. Ten mounted riot police rode
into the crowd, while other police stood by with a water cannon.
More than 20 prisoners escaped the immediate area. For two
days, several detainees sheltered in the protest tent camp, surrounded
by police and the desert. Some of them said they would risk jail
or death before going back to Woomera. One child said guards inside
the centre called him and other detainees animals.
Ali Narozi, a 20-year-old Afghan who had been locked in Woomera
for a year, spoke to the media in the tent camp. We are
scared from our homeland, he told the Age. We
come for a safer place, not be put in a [detention] camp.
Narozi expressed frustration with his asylum application, which
is currently before the Federal Court. He faced uncertainty, he
said, not knowing if or when the government would release him.
He had resorted to self-harm attempts, such as drinking shampoo,
and now required tablets to sleep. When he first applied for asylum,
immigration officials did not believe he was an Afghan. After
a period, the officials accepted he was, but said now the
situation in Afghanistan is better (and) we cannot give you a
visa.
Two escapees who went into hiding in Melbourne told reporters
they would never give themselves up to authorities. Our
life is not in danger but our mind is in danger, Sadiq Ali
declared. Every person became crazy in Woomera camp, even
children, female, male, everyone. He added: I think
animals are better treated than us in Woomera.
Government backlash
The governments crackdown in response to the breakout
began before the three-day Woomera protest had even ended. After
the demonstrators left the detention centre on Good Friday, ACM
guards clashed violently with detainees, according to inmates
who contacted the Age. Guards used tear gas against the
asylum seekers, including a one-year-old child, and one prisoner
suffered a suspected broken arm. Detainees threw bedposts and
garbage bins at guards. In the high-security Oscar compound, detainees
were handcuffed and locked in a common room until the next morning.
During the next days, guards warned detainees not to go near
security fences and constantly moved them between compounds to
prevent escape attempts.
Despite the obvious desperation of the escapees, the government
instigated a massive police operation to hunt them down, threatening
them with lengthy jail sentences. Police quickly arrested 31 asylum
seekers, who spent several nights in Port Augusta jail, being
treated like hardened criminals, before being returned to Woomera.
Immigration Minister Philip Ruddock warned that, once captured,
the escapees could be denied refugee status or, even if granted
visas, would have to serve jail sentences. If people commit
a serious offence under our law and that involves jail sentences,
that can lead to protection claims being vitiated, he said.
Ruddock criticised the South Australian state police, saying
they should have confronted protesters with more force and earlier.
It may have been a misjudgment, one would have hoped that
steps would have been taken at an earlier point in time to remove
the protesters from the environs of the detention centre,
he told Sky News.
Protest organisers held out the prospect of pressuring the
government to modify its policy but Prime Minister John Howard
joined Ruddock in declaring that the protests would only strengthen
the governments resolve. Howard railed against the protesters,
declaring no amount of demonstration, no series of breaches
of the law, is going to in any way alter the governments
policy in relation to illegal immigration.
Further, in a bid to intimidate opponents of the policy, police
charged 28 protesters with harbouring escapees or trespassing,
and Ruddock said those charged face up to 10 years in jail. Later
in the week, police raided the Melbourne house of a refugee advocate.
The demonstrations have revealed growing public opposition
to the governments brutal and inhumane treatment of asylum
seekers. The perspective of the various groups organising the
protests, however, is to appeal for support from Labor, the Australian
Democrats and the Greens, as well as trade union officials, all
of whom have long supported the erection and maintenance of draconian
refugee and immigration controls.
See Also:
Amnesty International criticises
Australia's human rights record on refugees
[20 March 2002]
Australian government refuses
to transfer refugees from malaria-ridden camp
[27 February 2002]
Life inside an Australian
refugee detention centre
[7 February 2002]
Why the Tampa
refugees should be free to live in Australia
[31 August 2001]
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