ben moretti on Fri, 28 Jun 2002 01:12:01 +0200 (CEST) |
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[Nettime-bold] Fwd: [v-i-s-a-s] We don't come here to sell our blood xxx |
Begin forwarded message: > From: visas-admin@lm.va.com.au > Date: Thu Jun 27, 2002 12:56:43 PM Australia/South > To: visas@lm.va.com.au > Subject: [v-i-s-a-s] We don't come here to sell our blood xxx > Reply-To: visas@lm.va.com.au > > Title: We don't come here to sell our blood > > Author: Caron Eliot > > Date: 27.06.02 > > Email: caron_eliot@yahoo.com.au > > Summary: Last night approximately 200 people had the chance to meet > with and hear some of the Afghani refugees who have been released from > Woomera IRPC on Temporary Protection Visas (TPVs). The occasion was the > second in a series of traditional Afgani dinners hosted by the Otherway > Centre, home of the Aboriginal Catholic Ministry. Since September 2001 > the Otherway Centre has grown to be a second home and strong community > support base for most of the 200 Afhgani Hazara refugees. > > > ----------------------------------------------- > > > Adelaide. Small seething city of lies and whispers. South Australia, a > cut above those other states in its proud colonial history; no petty > convicts here, only state-sanctioned rapists, murderers and thieves, > thank you. The foundations of colony - Parliament House, Government > House, Pilgrim Church - built with the bones of the ancestors, the > great grey rocks blasted out from the right-angled bend in the river. > This is the place of the kangaroo dreaming. Small moments of grace with > the vote for women, gay rights, decriminalisation of marihuana. But she > was always England's dour daughter, once fair skin pocked with the > daughter radioisotopes of uranium, obsequious accepter of mother's > little atomic bomb tests, uranium mines, theft of artesian waters, > nuclear waste dumps. Come on down, you've fucked the rest, now the fuck > the best! > > Woomera, central-north South Australia. 1950's boys' own rocket town, > far far away from what is considered as centre. Deemed the perfect > place for the national repository project, a facility to dispose of low > level radioactive waste. Watch this space. And recently another > spectacular transformation. Notorious prison camp (sorry, Immigration > Reception and Processing Centre) to house the inconvenient sons and > daughters of globalisation. Some of the 20,000,000+ asylum seekers > adrift in the world right now. Fleeing political persecution. > Afghanistan. Iraq. Iran. Hey, wait a minute, they must be terrorists. > Punish them all! Lock 'em up and throw way the key. They're "rejectees" > according to Philip Ruddock, Australia's Immigration Minister, and > we're gonna teach them a lesson they will never ever forget. > > 1,618 people in detention as of 12 April 2002. Mainly people, families, > who arrived into Australia's territorial waters by boat. Claiming > refugee status as defined under the United Nations Refugee Convention. > > 60,000 people unlawfully in Australia as of 30 June 2001. People having > overstayed their tourist/work/student visas. > > Do the sums. What's really going on here? Why is the Australian > Government squandering millions of dollars of public money in a > systematic and sadistic program of the denial of human rights? > Are we really compelled to endlessly repeat our brutal colonial > history, adding new forms of dispersals, extirpations and massacres to > our already bloody history? > > Every Indigenous South Australian - Mirning, Ngarindjeri, Kuarna, > Narungga, Adynyamathanha, Arabunna, Kokatha, Yankuntjara - I have heard > speak about the refugees has said more or less the same thing - "The > refugees are welcome here. We know what it is to be dispossessed and > locked up far from our families and we don't want anyone else to suffer > that. Not on our land. We know how to welcome strangers in the right > way. Let them free." > > Last night approximately 200 people had the chance to meet with and > hear some of the Afghani refugees who have been released from Woomera > IRPC on Temporary Protection Visas (TPVs). The occasion was the second > in a series of traditional Afgani dinners hosted by the Otherway > Centre, home of the Aboriginal Catholic Ministry. Since September 2001 > the Otherway Centre has grown to be a second home and strong community > support base for most of the 200 Afhgani Hazara refugees. Ex-detainee > Hussein Rezaiat is now the Centre's full-time Refugee Worker. In a > statement last November the Otherway Council made this statement: > > "We stand in solidarity with our sisters and brothers who are asylum > seekers and refugees. We have no trouble putting ourselves in their > shoes. We reject the harsh and cruel treatment being offered to > desperate, persecuted and needy people who have come to Australia for > help. We ask the Australian government and opposition to begin to act > with humanity. We know what it is to be oppressed - we have experienced > much of the past 200 years as oppression. We know what it is to be > alienated and estranged in our own country. We know what it is to fear > for the future of our families, our young people and our children. We > know what detention centres are - our people were pushed onto reserves > and had to have exemptions to leave them. Australian prisons have > excessive numbers of our people. We know what it is to have no right of > appeal - there was no appeal for our people either against protection > and assimilation or against the taking of children. We know what it is > to be called "illegal" - it was illegal for us to consort with > non-Indigenous people, illegal to leave the reserve, illegal to drink > alcohol. We know what it is to be powerless. We know what it is to be > refugees in our own land. For more than 200 years we have watched boat > people come to our land. They came to escape poverty, persecution and > the effects of war. They came to make a better life for themselves and > their families. Now that the descendants of the "first illegal boat > people" are no longer poor and powerless, it seems ironic that they > would deny the same chance and hope to present day asylum seekers and > refugees." > > Shirley Peisley AM, Centre Executive Officer and Fr Tony Pearson, > Chaplain welcomed us to the dinner with an Afghani saying - 'guests are > a gift from God'. South Australia has a long colonial history with > people from Afghanistan, as many Afghani camel workers came here in the > 19th century to open up the transport and communication lines through > the central desert region. In the 1990s Afghanistan had the world's > highest number of refugees living outside of its borders. Today there > are an estimated 4-6 million Afghani refugees. Most of the asylum > seekers in South Australia are Hazara people from the central part of > Afghanistan (Hazarajat or Hazaristan). They speak the Hazaragi dialect > of Farsi and represent a mixture of Turkish, Mongol and other races. > The Hazara have been discriminated and against for more than 200 years > in Afghanistan under a various regimes, with more than 60% of their > people massacred in the 19th century. The most recent massacres > occured in August 1998 at Mazar-i-Sharif (more than 8,000 men, women > and children slaughtered) and the Bamiyan Massacre, also in 1998. > > Qader Fedayee (real name used with his permission) is 18 years of age > and living in Adelaide on a Bridging Visa after some months spent at > Glenside Hospital recovering from severe depression and six suicide > attempts. He spent nearly two years incarcerated in Woomera as an > Unaccompanied Minor, > and shared a little of his story with us. He is from Mazar-i-Sharif, > where his whole family were killed by the Taliban in the massacre of > 1998. He escaped to Charkein and lived for 8 months with not enough > food, water or shelter. Many died during this period due to the extreme > cold. He travelled to Orezgan where the Taliban killed his uncle and > his friend. His extended family gave him money to pay a smuggler and he > travelled to overland to Pakistan, and then by boat to Thailand, Hong > Kong, Singapore, Indonesia and finally Australia. The boat voyage was > frightening and an Australian plane helped to rescue people. He was > brought straight to Woomera from Ashmore Reef. "In Woomera I wished > that the boat had sunk and that I had died." He is now studying English > five days a week. > > Qader Fedayee still has to prove to the Australian Government that he > is a refugee! > > Hassan (sorry but i couldn't find him to ask his full name) was > released 3 months ago from Woomera. As a community leader, he began by > acknowledging the people at Woomera who are currently on a hunger > strike. Hassan's applications for refugee status have been rejected at > the primary stage and also before the Refugee Review Tribunal (RRT). He > explained why "the process is not fair" to asylum seekers. A refugee's > first interview is with a Case Officer, the second with Immigration > officials. A third interview and then the language of the refugee is > analysed. The fourth interview is with a Migration Agent who acts as a > legal witness (rather than as a legal advocate for the refugees), and > then a fifth interview with the Case Manager and the Migration Agent. > This process takes about 25 days, with asylum seekers then waiting > around 9 months for a decision. > > They generally face rejection because of a language objection, and > subsequently spend another 12 to 30 months in detention during the > appeals process. According to Hassan most of the language objections > are baseless, with the people entrusted to analysing the language > having left Afghanistan 30 years ago. I think he was referring to the > fact that these 'experts' are out of touch with the living language, > and social conditions which effect language and necessity to learn a > second language of the dominant power group. > > Now Australia has signed an agreement worth $59,000,000 with the newly > installed Afghani Government to send the asylum seekers back. > > "We came to Australia as refugees. We don't come here to sell our > blood. It's a matter of life. We would like to work in Australia. We > would like to pay tax. About 90% of Afghani refugees are working now > and paying tax. We would like the opportunity to live in the middle of > liberty, which we never had in Afghanistan. We are tired. We paid a lot > of cost. We paid genocide and massacre for over 100 years. We don't > like to be tageted anymore. We would like to ask the people of > Australia to help us, to live in the world of humanity. We are not > harmful to the country. We would like to have a real liberalism and > liberty. Please ask the people in Australia to contact the media and > talk on behalf of powerless people in Detention Centres. We need your > support." > > Hassan's powerful and eloquent words were followed by those of Hussein > Rezaiat. He began by saying that he wanted to speak about happy news. > > "But how can I when my friends are on a hunger strike in the Detention > Centre? How can we talk happy story when our people are suffering in > Afghanistan, in refugee camps in Pakistan, in camps here?" > > Hussein then told the story of Mustafa, an 8 year old boy who lost all > of his family in 1998, and ended up in Woomera. This is another big > story and rather than try to retell it here I will ask Hussein if he > would like to tell it himself to indymedia readers. > > Speaking of his fellow asylum seekers he asked, "Why are they sewing > their lips? Why are they hanging themselves, crushing their bodies? It > is because they are hopeless. They came to Australia and found another > jail. Unkind government, unkind guards, treated them like shit, and > they became hopeless. > > They tried to speak. They wanted the media and Human Rights groups to > come in to the Detention Centres. They didn't allow us. When we tried > to speak with them they didn't listen. They tried to speak with you > with a hunger strike. We will be hungry and thirsty until we die." > > Aunty Shirley Peisley ended this very moving and strangely joyous > evening (those beautiful babies and children bounding and abounding > helped) by saying to the refugees, "You are welcome in our > country...Your presence enriches us and we love you very much." > > The Otherway Centre is considering hosting similar evenings and I can > totally recommend the experience. They are also looking for volunteers > to help with English classes, computer training, and other forms of > social and skills-based projects. So....here is a really practical way > to help make a difference. > > Otherway Centre, 185 Pirie Street, Adelaide, 5000 > Phone: (08)8232 1001 > Email: AfghaniNights@acc.asn.au > > > Hunger Strike Update, 12.15pm, Thursday 27 June 2002 > > I have just spoken with Ali Hader (name used with his permission, sorry > about the spelling) at Woomera. He said that 190 people including women > and very small children are continuing the hunger strike. He said that > many of them have been in Woomera for 18 and 19 months. They are very > tired. They came here for freedom. Not to be put in detention centres. > _______________________________________________ > [v-i-s-a-s] mailing list > email: art@v-i-s-a-s.net > url for this list: http://lm.va.com.au/mailman/listinfo/visas > v-i-s-a-s web: http://v-i-s-a-s.net > _______________________________________________ Nettime-bold mailing list Nettime-bold@nettime.org http://amsterdam.nettime.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nettime-bold