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Australian government determined to deport East Timorese refugees
By Jake Skeers
10 December 2002
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Despite considerable opposition from ordinary people, particularly
in the northern city of Darwin, the Australian government has
resumed the process of deporting about 1,800 East Timorese who
fled Indonesian rule during the 1980s and 1990s.
Most of the East Timorese have lived in Australia for up to
13 years, found jobs, undertaken studies and begun to raise families,
earning the respect and affection of other working class people.
Yet successive governments, Labor and Liberal, have kept them
in legal limbo for more than a decade, refusing to finalise their
claims for asylum.
After militarily intervening in East Timor in 1999 on the pretext
of protecting Timors people from Indonesian-backed militias,
the Howard government suspended moves to remove the refugees,
concerned that the deportations would undercut its claims to have
sent in troops for humanitarian reasons.
Howards expressions of concern for the East Timorese
were always completely cynical. Even at the height of the pro-Indonesian
rampages, the government allowed only about 200 Timorese UN staff
and their immediate families to flee to nearby Darwin, on three-month
safe haven visas. When their visas expired, they were
forced to return to the war-torn island.
Now, three years later, Canberra has determined that sufficient
time has elapsed to allow it to ignore humanitarian considerations
altogether and to push for immediate departure of long-term asylum
seekers.
Eighty four Timorese living in Darwin, the Northern Territory
capital, last month received Immigration Department letters, formally
rejecting their refugee claims and giving them 28 days to leave
Australia or appeal to the Refugee Review Tribunal (RRT). Since
September, the department has processed 564 applications, rejecting
all of them, while another 1,070 people are awaiting decisions.
If their RRT applications fail, they will face fees of $1,000
each. Under new laws, introduced last year following the Tampa
affair, no appeal can be made to the courts. Asylum seekers can
make pleas to Immigration Minister Philip Ruddock for compassionate
consideration but, in the meantime, they will lose the right to
work and all social entitlements, including Medicare health coverage.
Many of the asylum seekers live in Darwin, but hundreds have
moved to other cities, including Sydney, Melbourne and Adelaide.
All have chosen to remain permanently. Most of their children
cannot speak Portuguese, the official language adopted by the
East Timor government, or even the more commonly used languages
in Timor, Tetum and Indonesian.
Domingos De Silva arrived in Darwin in 1994 with his wife and
four children. A fifth child was born in Australia. De Silva was
on an Indonesian army hit list because of his links to the East
Timorese resistance movement. The only way I had to save
my family and myself was to run away, he told the Northern
Territory News. I consider Darwin my home now, Ive
made a new life here with my family... None of my children, except
my oldest one, know any other language but English. My oldest
child is studying IT at the university here. If we went back,
wed be going back to nothing.
Elizabeth Lay who works as a kitchen hand in Sydney and Kian
Ting Jong, who is a factory worker, both face deportation. Married
seven months ago, they are expecting their first baby. It
would be very hard for me to raise a baby in East Timor,
Elizabeth Lay told the Sun-Herald. There are not
enough doctors and not much of a future. Australia has become
our home.
Most of the refugees suffered physical violence or detention
under the Suharto dictatorship. An analysis of 147 cases by the
Victorian Refugee Advice and Casework Service in 1997 found that
46 percent of all applicants had suffered serious assault, 33
percent had been tortured and 39 percent had family members killed
by Indonesian security forces. In addition, 55 percent had a close
family member arrested, 32 percent had been detained for long
periods of time and 19 percent had been sexually assaulted (43
percent of all women applicants).
Many of the East Timorese fled their homeland in the wake of
the 1991 Dili massacre, when Indonesian troops killed more than
200 people after opening fire on a funeral procession for a pro-independence
demonstrator. The Keating Labor government prevented them from
gaining protection visas, beginning a series of legal manoeuvres
against the families that were continued by the Howard government.
Having deliberately stalled the refugees applications
since 1996, the Liberal government now claims it is safe for them
to return. But this assessment flies in the face of all available
evidence. East Timor is the poorest country in Asia with unemployment
estimated at 80-90 percent. Health and education facilities are
minimal and diseases such as malaria, dengue fever and tuberculosis
are common. Forty percent of people live below the poverty line
of 55 US cents per day, 50 percent are illiterate and average
life expectancy is only 56 years. These conditions are creating
enormous social tensions, giving rise to severe unrest and disturbances,
including last weeks clashes with police and UN troops.
The refugees have received significant public backing in Australia.
The conservative Northern Territory News has published
letters and an editorial supporting the Timorese. I read
the article on the Timorese refugees with a mixture of sorrow
and disgust, one woman wrote. These are people who
have integrated into society, had children and raised their families
here for nearly 10 years... How unfair, unAustralian and inhumane
of our government.
Another asked Ruddock: How much more uncaring can you
get? ... Dont you have any feelings for the poor little
children who were born here and dont know any other place
other than Australia, which they call home? Do you
want to uproot them and traumatise them and leave a permanent
scar in their hearts and in their minds?
Unmoved, Ruddock has publicly accused the Timorese and their
supporters of delaying their applications and appeals for 10 years
in order to outwit authorities and play upon public
sympathy. But his accusations conflict with documents showing
that in 1995 the Keating government issued a secret directive
to immigration officials to impose a moratorium on Timorese refugee
applications, a freeze that was then extended by the Howard government.
While the minister has promised to give the applicants due
consideration on compassionate grounds if the RRT rejects their
appeals, his comments indicate the likely outcome.
The situation facing the Timorese refugees highlights the duplicity
and hypocrisy that has driven Australian policy for the past three
decades. Suhartos regime invaded East Timor in 1975 with
the backing of the United States and Australia. More than 200,000
Timorese died as a result. But in return for access to the lucrative
oil and gas deposits under the Timor Sea, in 1978 Australia became
the only country to formally recognise the Indonesian annexation,
a deal that was sealed with the signing of the Timor Gap Treaty
in 1989.
So as not to compromise its relations with Jakarta, the Labor
government held the Timorese refugees on temporary visas, rather
than allowing them refugee status. In 1993 and 1994 the Immigration
Department rejected the cases of a number of applicants, including
Lay Kon Tji, claiming that they did not have a well founded fear
of persecution if forced to return to Timor.
When the RRT finally heard Lays appeal, it accepted that
he would face detention and torture because of his ethnic Chinese
background and his pro-independence political views, but still
rejected his application. Despite its recognition of Indonesian
rule, the government cynically argued that because East Timor
remained under Portuguese sovereignty according to the UN, Lay
could seek refuge in Portugal.
On three occasions, in 1997, 1998 and 2000, the Federal Court
ruled against the governments argument, ordering the RRT
to reconsider the applications. But the government continued to
block the cases, only dropping its litigation in 2000. Finally,
in March 2002, it sent letters to the Timorese informing them
that their applications would be re-considered in the light of
the changed political situation in East Timor.
Todays assault on the basic democratic rights of long-term
Timorese residents is entirely in line with the record of successive
governments on East Timor over the last three decades. The overriding
consideration dictating official policy has been to obtain the
lions share of Timor oil and gas wealth and to advance Australias
strategic and economic interests in the region, regardless of
the consequences for the Timorese people.
See Also:
East Timor's "independence":
illusion and reality
[18 May 2002]
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