Editorial
The
Right To Move, Live and Work Anywhere
Maryam
Namazie
September
10, 2001
Australia:
On 26 August, MS Tampa, a Norwegian ship, rescued
430 plus mainly Afghan asylum seekers on their way to Australia from
Indonesia. Though the Tampa had reached
Australian waters, the Australian government denied the victims of Taliban’s
vile regime their right to seek asylum and land. During the stand off, the Australian government never sent any
medical assistance though 10 of the asylum seekers were unconscious on deck and
pregnant women were falling ill.
Instead, it sent commandos on board and forcibly transferred the asylum
seekers to New Zealand and the Pacific state of Nauru where their applications
are to be processed. There are reports
that the women and children will be processed in New Zealand while the men are
to be processed in Nauru.
The Australian government, the only Western
country in the world with mandatory detention for all asylum seekers without possibility
of review, has now set another dangerous precedent in its assault on refugee
rights. It has put into practice the
recently fashionable notion that asylum seekers should be processed in ‘safe’
havens and only allowed into the West in a regularised immigration-type
manner.
The Australian government has rightly been
condemned by public opinion. It is this
public opinion that has prevented that racist government from directly
returning the asylum seekers to Afghanistan.
It is again this public opinion, trade unions, progressive, socialist
and rights organisations that can and must continue to demand their return and
the right to asylum of the 434 asylum seekers in Australia itself.
Britain:
On another front, the UK government is demanding
the closure of Sangatte, a substandard refugee camp in Calais, France and
calling on the military to stop asylum seekers from entering Britain via the
Eurotunnel. Clearly the issue at hand
is not Sangatte camp; the Red Cross run camp was created because asylum seekers
were gathering in Calais and not vice versa.
What, then, is the issue at hand?
Why can’t asylum seekers come to Britain?
Some say the flow of people to the UK must be
stopped because having ‘so many’ asylum seekers is costly. In reality, it costs 1/5 of 1 percent of
government spending or £10.00 per head of population; asylum seekers receive
the equivalent of 70% of the insufficient income support provided to UK
citizens; the European population is greying and immigrants are needed to
sustain the economy, etc. Though
accurate, these responses are insufficient when dealing with human beings. Even if it does cost ‘too much,’ asylum
seekers, ‘economic’ migrants, ‘illegals,’ have a right to come to Britain and
live and work here. Even if Iran and
Afghanistan were not ruled by Islamic reaction, even if reactionary nationalist
parties did not run Iraqi Kurdistan, they would still have such a right. Rights are not dependant on cost, on polls,
on one’s method of arrival…
The right at stake is the right of human beings –
and not just those with capital – to move, to live and to work anywhere they
choose. And like all rights, it is up
to us to demand it, struggle for it and turn this human concept into a societal
norm.