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Australia: former minister fans anti-Muslim prejudice and
racism
By Terry Cook and Tania Kent
22 February 2006
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That politicians now have little compunction in making openly
racist comments is testimony to the extreme rightward shift in
official politics in Australia and to the noxious public climate
being fostered by the political and media establishment.
Last week Liberal Party federal backbencher Dana Vale, a former
minister for veteran affairs in the Howard government, launched
into an anti-Moslem diatribe reminiscent of the cries of populate
or perish that underpinned the White Australia policy last
century. Then the image of Asian hordes descending on Australia
was regularly conjured up to justify an openly discriminatory
anti-Asian immigration program.
Substitute Muslim for Asian and you
have the gist of Vales remarks. While being interviewed
about the parliamentary debate over the abortion drug RU486, she
declared Australia would be a Muslim nation in 50 years
time because we are aborting ourselves almost out
of existence by 100,000 abortions every year... Vale went
on: If you multiply that by 50, thats five million
potential Australians we wont have here.
Vales comments follow a violent and ugly race riot against
Middle Eastern people by a drunken mob in the Sydney suburb of
Cronulla last December. In its wake, the media, government and
opposition parties in New South Wales have continued to whip up
anti-Muslim hysteria by fostering fears about Middle Eastern
crime.
Moreover Vales remarks emerged just days after the publication
in three Australian newspapers, including Rupert Murdochs
Courier-Mail, of copies of the Danish cartoons depicting
the Prophet Muhammad. Like the cartoons, Vales remarks were
deliberately provocative, aimed at inflaming tensions and at encouraging
anti-Muslim prejudice, backwardness and ignorance.
Significantly Vales bigoted statement drew only muted
criticism across the political spectrum and not a single serious
demand that she be disciplined. Politicians of all stripes dismissed
Vale as a kind of oddball whose comments were unfortunate
and dopey and unrepresentative of views in parliamentary
circles.
Labor Opposition leader Kim Beazley referred to Vale as poor
old Dana, adding that she was an authentic representative
of this [Howard] governments growing extremism. He
did not elaborate further, however. To do so would have raised
questions about Labors own support for the Howard governments
extremismfrom its anti-refugee policies to its
assault on democratic rights through draconian anti-terror laws.
Labor deputy leader Jenny Macklin mildly described the comments
as offensive and called on Vale to apologise.
Labors shadow foreign affairs spokesman Kevin Rudd said
Vales remarks were exceptionally unusual and
weird but insisted that everyones entitled
to their point of view.
Vales outburst, however, is far from an aberration. It
reflects the climate cultivated over the past five years by the
Howard government, with the support of Labor and the media, to
vilify people of Middle Eastern descent as potential terrorists
determined to impose an Islamic state in Australia.
The aim of the campaign has been to harness public opinion
behind the bogus war on terror and Australian military
involvement in the occupation of Afghanistan and Iraq. On the
domestic front, it is designed to create a climate of fear and
tension to divide working people amid growing popular anger and
hostility over unemployment, deteriorating social conditions and
social inequality.
Howard is cultivating a right-wing base among the most backward
sections of the population. In response to Vales comments,
government ministers were careful not to alienate this constituency.
Immigration Minister Amanda Vanstone dismissed the backbenchers
remarks as being based on a complete misunderstanding of
how our migration program works. The minister, however,
was playing to the same prejudices, simply putting a minus where
Vale put a plus. According to Vanstone, Australias immigration
intake was such that the country could not possibly become an
Islamic nation in 50 years.
Howards response
Whether Prime Minister Howard knew of Vales remarks in
advance is not known. However, as a key Howard supporter, Vale
was well aware that her comments were in line with Howards
long history of encouraging racist and backward sentiment. While
not explicitly endorsing Vales views, Howard ignored suggestions
that he reprimand Vale or make her apologise. Instead, he merely
advised all government MPs to use measured statements
during the RU486 debate.
Howards response is a signal that the anti-Muslim campaign
is about to be intensified. Within days of the Vale incident,
the Australian, Rupert Murdochs flagship, published
the contents of an interview with Howard in Decemberjust
days before the Cronulla race riotfor an upcoming book dealing
with his 10 years as prime minister.
Howards remarks were just as inflammatory as those of
Vale. During the interview, the prime minister declared that there
was a fragment of Muslim immigrants that was utterly
antagonistic to our kind of society. He claimed that there
was no equivalent in the raving on about jihad among
other immigrants, adding that some of the associated attitudes
(of Muslims) towards women are a problem.
In an associated editorial, the Australian gave its
full support to Howards pandering to anti-Muslim prejudice.
In recent years we have had no one, other than Muslims,
bring such missionary zeal to the establishment of their own religions
and society within our own, it declared.
The editorial noted that Howard had been consigned to the political
wilderness in 1988 for calling for a cut to the number of
Asian immigrants. His latest comments should not have the
same effect, the Australian emphasised. They
should, in fact, be closely studied by both Australians who were
born and bred here and the most recent arrivals to the country.
In other words, the encouragement of racism and backwardness
that was politically unacceptable two decades ago has now become
the norm. Remarks that can only spur on the persecution and vilification
of Middle East and Muslim immigrants should, according to the
Australian, not only be condoned but welcomed and studied.
It is no accident that the Australian prints such filth.
Murdochs press has been in the forefront of promoting bigotry
and intolerance. The Daily Telegraph tabloid in
Sydney was directly involved in stirring up the reclaim
our beaches campaign that led to the violent anti-Middle
Eastern race riot in Cronulla in December.
The Australian editorial dovetails with the ongoing
racist campaign being conducted by the state Labor government
and the Liberal Party opposition in New South Wales to shift the
blame for the Cronulla riot on to Middle Eastern youththat
is, on to the victims.
For weeks, opposition leader Peter Debnam has been accusing
the state Labor government of being soft on ethnic violence,
soft on Middle Eastern crime and failing to take action
against those involved in so-called revenge attacks
following the Cronulla riot. He has provocatively declared that
there are hundreds of Middle Eastern thugs and urban
terrorists who must be rounded up and jailed.
Far from opposing these racist diatribes, Labor Premier Morris
Iemma has responded in kind. On February 10, New South Wales police
raided several homes and arrested eight Middle Eastern men over
their alleged involvement in revenge attacks. Despite
the lack of any credible evidence against them, Iemma publicly
branded the young men as grubs.
It should be added that the first person convicted and jailed
in relation to the Cronulla riots was not one of the perpetratorsmany
of whom were caught on TV footagebut a young Lebanese man,
Hadi Khawaja. Significantly he was put in prison not for physically
attacking someone, but for stealing and burning an Australian
flag in protest over the violence meted out to Middle Eastern
youth.
It is within this toxic political climate that Vale has added
her provocative remarks, further fanning the flames of communal
tension. Her statement is part of a reactionary turn in political
circles that only has one purpose: to disorient and divide working
people in preparation for a renewed assault on living standards
and democratic rights, as well as further criminal military adventures
abroad.
See Also:
Racism, religious obscurantism and
hypocrisy
Australian parliament's "vote of conscience" on RU486
[21 February 2006]
Anti-Muslim cartoons published in Australia
[16 February 2006]
In their own words: The politics behind
the anti-Muslim cartoons
[15 February 2006]
Denmark and Jyllands-Posten: The background
to a provocation
[10 February 2006]
European media publish anti-Muslim cartoons:
An ugly and calculated provocation
[4 February 2006]
The class issues behind
Australia's race riots
[22 December 2005]
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