Another small victory against detention
It's not enough though
Maryam Namazie
ifir@ukonline.co.uk
16 December 2002
Under massive international and
national pressure, the Australian government has partially backed down on the
issue of detention of asylum seekers. Under new guidelines released by
Immigration Minister Philip Ruddock, unaccompanied minors will now be placed in
foster care and women with children will be offered an 'alternative' to living
in high-security detention centres. Also, the Australian government has
reported that it will shut down Woomera detention centre as soon as possible.
As Hambastegi readers know, Woomera has been labelled the worst detention
centre in Australia for its human rights abuses and has been the scene of
intense opposition by the International Federation of Iranian Refugees, asylum
seekers, refugee rights activists and others nationally and internationally.
The release of women and children
from detention and the shutting down of Woomera are critical gains and show
just how important protesting, raising public awareness and mobilising support
for asylum seekers is. We must keep this pressure on and escalate it. We must
keep organising positive forms of protest including demonstrations, sit-ins, speaking
tours, caravans and public meetings to gain public support in Australia and
internationally. We must organise escapes and break-and pull down detention
centre barbed wire walls (as was done at Woomera) and so on.
Yet while the partial retreat of
the Australian government is significant, it is in no way enough. It is not
enough for the Australian government to release women and children. It is not
enough for them to shut down Woomera. It is not even enough for them to end the
policy of mandatory detention. The Australian government
must completely end its policy of detaining asylum seekers and shut down all
its detention centres. It must end the so-called Pacific solution and allow
asylum seekers entry into Australia. It must pay reparations to all those it
has interned and mentally and physically abused. (We recently received news
that the Badraies, parents of Shayan,
a seven-year-old Iranian boy who was seriously traumatised and mentally scarred
by two years in detention will launch a $750,000 legal action against the
Immigration Minister and his department for Shayan's
pain and suffering and the costs of ongoing psychiatric counselling.) The
Australian government must give in to an independent inquiry to investigate the
extent of its abuses and that of private companies like the ACM that have been
managing centres and abused rights. The Australian government must officially
and publicly concede wrongdoing. The Immigration Minister Ruddock and Prime Minister
Howard must resign.
Of course, whether or not these
happen, depend on us. Human beings, within progressive movements, make change
for the better, not governments. Will we be able to force the Australian
government to a complete retreat? Can we make the law on detaining asylum seekers
as much of an outrage in public opinion as the Australian government's 1930s
law which allowed Aboriginal 'half-caste' children to be removed from their
homes and transported to 're-education' centres where they were trained as
domestic workers in order to 'integrate' them?
There are many factors involved in
whether we can succeed but there are several important ones that need to be
mentioned here. One is that the protest we continue to organise must be a
positive and international one. We mustn't allow asylum seekers to harm and
mutilate themselves in the ensuing protests. In defence of asylum rights, too, advocates
mustn't use backward and negative methods such as hunger strikes or symbolic
mutilations just as they wouldn't use these methods say in defence of a
firefighters' strike. The working class must intervene in this struggle as a
struggle that affects all of society. We must never compromise on people's
rights. We must call detention and detention centres what they are. Detention
is a sanitised name for imprisoning innocent people who have committed no crime.
Detention centres are concentration camps. These centres are nothing but
symbols of state racism (while the Australian government has conceded that most
'illegal' immigrants are British, it is the 'easterners' that are locked up
like animals). They are nothing but institutions of state-sponsored violence
under legal cover. Clearly, detaining innocent people who have fled
persecution, violations, political Islam and countries like Iran, Iraq and
Afghanistan, even for an hour is a crime. On these we must not compromise.