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Australian woman imprisoned for 10 months as an illegal immigrant
By Mike Head
9 February 2005
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A shocking case has come to light exposing the inhumane and
anti-democratic nature of Australias mandatory detention
system.
Cornelia Rau, 39, a former Qantas flight attendant, is a permanent
resident of Australia who emigrated from Germany with her family
when she was a baby. Last March, she disappeared after discharging
herself from the psychiatric unit at Sydneys Manly Hospital,
where she was being treated for schizophrenia. She was due to
be brought before the Mental Health Review Tribunal and apparently
feared being placed under a compulsory medication order. Rau had
been in and out of hospitals for several years, often refusing
to take medication because of its debilitating side effects.
She made her way to Cape York in north Queensland, and was
taken into care by members of an Aboriginal community. They recognised
her distressed state and, in an attempt to ensure her safety,
took her to the Queensland state police. Because she spoke German,
however, the police authorities immediately suspected that she
might be an illegal migrant and handed her over to
the immigration department.
According to Immigration Minister Amanda Vanstone, officials
from her department concluded, after questioning Rau and sending
her for psychiatric evaluation, that she was behaving oddly
but was not mentally ill. For six months, Rau was locked up in
a Brisbane jail, which also functions as an immigration detention
facility, before being shipped across the country to the notorious
semi-desert Baxter refugee centre, in South Australia.
In Baxter, her mental condition deteriorated. Refugee support
groups said she screamed, ripped her clothes off, smeared faeces
on walls and refused to cooperate with guards. She also refused
to talk, gave false names and changed her story. She often cried,
ate dirt and said she wanted to die.
Instead of receiving psychiatric treatment, however, she was
consigned to one of Baxters most severe punishment cells,
in the Red One block. For two months, she was locked up
in an isolation cell for more than 18 hours a day, refugee
advocate Bernadette Wauchope told journalists. When she
was allowed out of her room for a few hours exercise, it
would take up to six riot officers to force her back into her
room, fighting and screaming. One man who had been in Red One
said he could hear her screaming in her cell for hours.
Despite her worsening health, immigration officials and the
management of the Baxter facility refused to allow Rau to be seen
by outside doctors, insisting in true Catch-22 fashion, that Rau
had not requested an independent assessment. Royal Australian
and New Zealand College of Psychiatrists chairwoman Dr Louise
Newman said she and others tried to see Rau in December but were
denied permission, even though Rau was obviously incapable of
making a request for help.
South Australias public advocate, Jonathan Harley, who
had been alerted to Raus plight by refugee groups, also
tried unsuccessfully for two months to have her circumstances
investigated.
Rau was only released from Baxter last Friday, after months
of agitation by fellow detainees, who were alarmed by her treatment.
Through their efforts, Raus story was reported in a Sydney
newspaper last week, leading to her identification by her family,
who had reported her to police as missing last August. If not
for the concerns raised by the Baxter asylum seekers, the seriously
disturbed woman would still be incarcerated.
Rau is currently undergoing intensive treatment under sedation
in a high-dependency ward at Adelaides Glenside hospital.
Her sister and brother-in-law, both well-known journalists, say
they fear that her imprisonment may have caused irreparable mental
damage. Our greatest fear is that these months of incarcerationany
restrictions on freedom are anathema to herhave irretrievably
tipped her over the edge and well never find her again,
they wrote in the Sydney Morning Herald.
Official whitewash
Prime Minister John Howard has described Raus ordeal
as a regrettable incident. Various media commentators
have pointed to a lack of coordination between state and federal
police, mental health and immigration agencies. But the tragedy
reveals the inevitable logic of the system of arbitrary and indefinite
detention of asylum seekers, which was first imposed by a Labor
government in the early 1990s.
In fact, the police and immigration officers who incarcerated
Rau were fulfilling their obligations under the Migration Act,
which requires the automatic detention of anyone suspected of
being an unlawful non-citizen. This completely arbitrary
detentionno trial or hearing is conductedis potentially
indefinite; it must continue until the prisoner is either granted
a visa or deported.
The introduction of administrative detention marked a fundamental
break from the centuries-old principle of habeas corpusno
imprisonment without trial. As Raus plight illustrates,
it has placed enormous, unchecked power in the hands of the government
of the day.
Once inside detention centres, no external, independent or
judicial mechanism exists to monitor the conditions to which detainees
are subjected. This is despite United Nations and Human Rights
and Equal Opportunity reports condemning conditions in the camps,
and specifically the treatment of mentally-ill inmates, as atrocious
and in breach of international human rights law.
Over the past four years, the Howard government has demonised
asylum seekers and utilised the so-called war on terrorism
to attack fundamental democratic rights. Desperate refugees, who
have undertaken perilous voyages in an effort to find safety and
security for their families, have been falsely accused of throwing
children overboard, or vilified as potential terrorists. Thousands
have been herded into hellish camps in northern and central Australia,
or transported to remote Pacific islands.
Those who have protested, staged hunger strikes or even attempted
suicide have invariably been denounced for seeking to blackmail
the government into letting them go free. Many, including children,
whose mental health has disintegrated after years of detention,
maltreatment and trauma, have been treated as conmen or tricksters,
faking illnesses to secure their release.
Given this atmosphere, the response of government officials
to Raus condition is hardly surprising. They assumed that
she was just putting it on to evade detention. Indeed,
Vanstone has declared that it was a pretty fair understanding
for both the police and immigration officers to believe that Rau
was maybe unlawful. The fact of the matter is that
such understandings underpin the entire detention
system, right up to Vanstone herself, who wields ultimate power
in deciding whether someone should be detained or deported.
The far-reaching nature of this executive power was demonstrated
last August, when the Australian High Court ruled in three landmark
cases that the federal government can detain rejected asylum seekers
indefinitelyperhaps for lifeeven if they cannot be
deported to any other country, and irrespective of the intolerable
conditions inside the detention centres.
Rau is not the first person to be detained under this regime
without any justification. Last November, it was reported that
the Australian Security Intelligence Organisation (ASIO) was belatedly
forced to pay about $200,000 compensation to a Kuwaiti asylum
seeker it falsely classified as a national security risk, causing
him to be detained without trial in a refugee camp for nearly
two years.
Despite such abuses, the Howard government has steadily extended
the scope of executive detention. In 2003, it pushed through parliament,
with Labors help, laws to give ASIO and the federal police
the power to detain and interrogate people without trial, merely
on suspicion that they may have information relevant to terrorism.
Obvious questions arise. How many people like Cornelia Rau
have been wrongly detained inside refugee camps or jails? Are
there more mentally-ill people locked away because they cannot
obtain decent care? How many asylum seekers are being denied proper
medical treatment? Rau was thrown into solitary confinement even
though she had the advantage of being of European descent, with
prominent relatives. What fate can be expected for more isolated
individuals, or vulnerable detainees from the Middle East, Africa
and Asia?
A former nurse at the now-mothballed Woomera detention centre
has confirmed that mental illness was rife there, but went untreated
because management wanted to hide it. Wayne Lynch said many of
the detainees were depressed and suicidal, yet management refused
to allow them to obtain psychiatric treatment outside the facility.
I wrote letter after letter about the mental health of certain
refugees and I actually feared for their lives, he told
ABC radio. We had all of these mentally ill people in detention
who were being medicated, and sedated, and incarcerated... and
I was prevented from actually getting support for them outside
of the detention centre.
The Howard government remains determined to whitewash the affair
and maintain the system that produced it. Vanstones immediate
response to the revelations was to declare that nothing was amissthe
police and her department had done everything humanly possible
to ascertain Raus true identity.
Her callous stance has fuelled public outrage, however. Letters
have flooded into newspapers condemning Raus mistreatment
as absolutely disgusting, appalling, inexcusable,
shameful and a damning indictment of our treatment
of both asylum seekers and the mentally ill.
As a result, Howard has felt obliged to step in to promise
an inquiry, while still refusing to apologise to Rau and her family.
But he and Vanstone have organised a closed-door inquiry, to be
conducted over the next six weeks by former Australian Federal
Police chief Mick Palmer. The purpose of this private inquiry
is not only to cover up the role of the police and immigration
authorities. More fundamentally, its aim is to ensure that the
underlying system of executive detention is not called into question.
But Raus detention was no mistake. The entire
affair has underlined the increasing turn to police-state methods
in Australia. There is no law requiring anyone to carry IDin
1987 the Labor governments plan to introduce a compulsory
Australia Card was withdrawn in the face of widespread
hostility. But, judging by Cornelia Raus experience, anyone
who fails to produce acceptable ID, speaks a foreign language
or has an accent when speaking English, could find themselves
behind bars and held incommunicado indefinitely. Meanwhile, the
barbaric treatment of refugees continues unabated.
See Also:
Australia: Howard
government cynically "tweaks" its anti-refugee policy
[31 August 2004]
Australia: Howard's
2001 election lies return to haunt him
[25 August 2004]
Australia's highest
court sanctions indefinite detention
[24 August 2004]
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