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Has the Australian government been lying to Iranian asylum
seekers?
By Jake Skeers
27 May 2003
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Internal Immigration Department documents recently released
by the Australian Financial Review and statements by the
Iranian consulate in Canberra throw into doubt announcements by
the Australian government last March that an agreement with Iran
allowed for the forced deportation of Iranian asylum seekers.
If the Howard government has lied about the deal, this would
not be the first time it has been caught deceiving the Australian
population about its dealings with refugees.
During the notorious children overboard affair,
the government released deliberately misleading photographs, then
falsely claimed that refugees on a boat bound for Australia had
thrown their children overboard. The lies, accepted uncritically
by the media, became a key element in Prime Minister John Howards
campaign to demonise asylum seekers in the lead up to the 2001
federal election.
The recently leaked documents reveal that the government has
been desperately trying to negotiate a deal with Iran, particularly
since late last year, to deport the 274 Iranian refugees currently
being held in Australian detention centres. The Iranians are the
largest national group of boat arrivals still in detention. Several
have been held for over four years, and more than 200 have exhausted
the few avenues of legal appeal available. Many fear torture,
jail and even worse if they are forced back to Iran, and so, despite
the hellish conditions in the centres, are determined not to be
pressured into accepting repatriation.
On March 12, Immigration Minister Philip Ruddock declared that
the government had signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU)
with Iran to return the asylum seekers. Under the deal, detainees
who had been denied refugee status would be given 28 days to accept
a lump-sum payment and a one-way ticket to Iran. In exchange,
the Australian government would provide 2,000 working holiday
visas to young Iranians. Ruddock indicated that the terms of the
MOU allowed for the involuntary deportation of asylum seekers
who refused to return voluntarily to Iran.
Following Ruddocks announcement, immigration department
officials visited the Iranian detainees to try to convince them
to accept the voluntary package. They told the refugees
that if they refused, Iran would accept their forced deportation
from Australia in the near future.
But documents released by the Australian Financial Review
earlier this month suggest that this may have been a ploy
to deny Iranians accurate information about their situation.
The documents spell out that the immigration departments
strategy was to pressure the Iranian refugees to accept a voluntary
return on the basis that there was an actual or perceived threat
of forced deportation. One of the documents is a draft report
dated December 2002 by John Okley, assistant secretary of international
co-operation in the Department of Immigration, entitled Return
of Iranian Nationals: Update on negotiations and proposed next
steps. It states: the key to enlisting voluntary departure
lies in the creation of a credible threat of involuntary removal.
The report proposes that the Australian government enlist Iranian
officials to visit the detention centres. In concert with the
visit, immigration officials would distribute a letter suggesting
that Iran and Australia were working together to involuntarily
deport detainees who did not accept voluntary deportation. This
would create an impression that Iran was actively supporting removals.
A sample draft letter, addressed to the Iranian detainees
declares: If you do not choose to return in a dignified
manner the Australian Government will take steps to return you
to Iran in the near future. This return will not provide you with
the same benefits....
Okley notes in the report that Iran almost never accepts the
involuntary deportation of its nationals. He could only cite the
case of Switzerland, where an agreement was reached with a local
embassy to deport 100 Iranians. The deal broke downafter
only one asylum seeker was deportedwhen the national government
in Tehran discovered its existence.
The Iranian government fears that if it allowed forced deportations
then governments in Britain, France, Germany and the Netherlands
may attempt to return tens of thousands of Iranian asylum seekers.
Iran, with a per capita GDP around one tenth of Australias,
is already holding around two million refugees, mostly from Afghanistan.
A spokesperson at the Iranian Embassy in Canberra told the
Australian Financial Review that there was no agreement
for the involuntary deportation of Iranians. We shall not
accept the forced repatriation of Iranians from any country.
The embassy later reiterated this position and added: But
if the Australian government put Iranians on a plane and dumped
them on our tarmac, obviously we would not reject them. No country
can reject its own nationals.
The government has refused a Senate request to table the MOU
in parliament. Government Senator, Helen Coonan, said it was not
in the public interest to release the agreement, insisting
it would not be released publicly at any time.
This is not the only aspect of the governments immigration
policy that is shrouded in secrecy. The immigration department
routinely incarcerates asylum seekers in detention centres with
limited access to lawyers or advocacy groups, denying the media
any access to the centres. It then tries to manipulate public
opinion by releasing selective and often damaging information
about the detainees conduct inside.
Most of the Iranian asylum seekers are held at the Baxter detention
centre, located some 400 km from the nearest major city, Adelaide.
Lawyers, psychologists and refugee advocates told a UN reporting
team last year that they regularly had difficulty accessing the
detainees. Lawyers need a specific request from a detainee, while
other organisations and individuals must apply to Ruddock to gain
entry.
The UN report, drawn up by an envoy for the UN Human Rights
Commissioner, concluded that the Howard government denied detainees
appropriate, concise and regular information about their
rights. In some cases it was felt that accessing legal aid with
regard to complaints about treatment and conditions in the detention
centres presented a genuine difficulty.
The governments attempted expulsion of the Iranian refugees
is part of its broader agenda of clearing the camps. Currently
there are around 1,000 asylum seekers in detention in Australia
and 500 in Australian-financed camps on the impoverished island
of Nauru and Papua New Guineas Manus Island, including more
than 100 children. Since November 2001, after the Australian military
launched a massive operation to expel refugee boats from Australian
waters, culminating in the drowning deaths of 353 asylum seekers,
no refugee boat has reached the country. As a consequence, detainee
numbers have halved in the past two years.
Rather than simply granting the remaining refugees asylum,
the Howard government is intent on forcing them back. It hopes
its deal with Afghanistans Karzai regime, which currently
allows for the return of Afghans who have accepted a so-called
voluntary package, will be extended to allow forcible
returns. At the same time, Howard has already indicated that Iraqis
will soon be sent back to a country that lacks the most basic
infrastructure and security.
Under conditions where its refugee policies contravene UN conventions,
human rights treaties and the most fundamental democratic rights,
the Howard government is increasingly resorting to secrecy, threats
and lies to carry them through.
See Also:
Australian government plans
to repatriate refugees to war-torn Iraq
[24 April 2003]
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