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Subject:
From:
David Griffin <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
The philosophy, work & influences of Noam Chomsky
Date:
Fri, 5 Apr 2002 02:21:12 EST
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-------------------------
Via Workers World News Service
Reprinted from the April 4, 2002
issue of Workers World newspaper
-------------------------

AUSTRALIANS HIT GOV'T RACISM AIMED AT REFUGEES

By Malcolm Cummins
Sydney, Australia

Opposition is mounting in Australia to the imprisonment of
refugees. Successive Australian governments have had a
policy of mandatory detention for any refugee who arrives in
that country seeking political asylum. The current
administration of Prime Minister John Howard won re-election
last November by whipping up a racist campaign against
refugees. Prior to the racist frenzy, Howard had been
expected to lose.

Howard claimed that a group of Iraqi refugees had thrown
their children into the ocean from a boat stopped by an
Australian warship. The claim was later revealed to be
false, but the government used the incident to demonize all
refugees seeking entry to Australia. Ironically, that same
warship is now enforcing U.S. sanctions against Iraq in the
Persian Gulf.

Refugees who arrive in Australia are imprisoned for long
periods in detention centers, where conditions are often
brutal. Many Iraqi and Afghan refugees have been sent to
Woomera, a camp in the desert of central Australia where
temperatures can reach 120 degrees. Under these desperate
conditions, some have tried to commit suicide by throwing
themselves onto razor-wire fences.

Security at the Woomera camp is provided by an Australian
subsidiary of Wackenhut. Wackenhut runs private prisons in
the U.S. and has been accused by the Justice Department of
violating U.S. inmates' rights "by habitually using
excessive force and allowing brutal fights over such basic
items as food, clothing and shoes," according to the
Associated Press.

Husain, an Iraqi refugee who spent seven months and 12 days
at Woomera, described conditions there as being "very
terrible." He said the guards had a "bad mentality. They
insult us and swear at us." The Howard government is hoping
that by treating refugees in the most barbaric manner
possible, it will deter others who might be thinking about
trying to make it to Australia.

It is a continuation of a racist immigration policy
practiced by both major capitalist parties since World War
II--called the "white Australia policy"--that sought to keep
people of color from immigrating.

The refugees, unions and progressive movement are fighting
back. Support groups are springing up all over the country,
even in rural areas. Many groups are planning to go to
Woomera for a "Protest and Festival of Freedom" from March
28 to April 1.

One of the organizers, Damien Lawson of "No One is Illegal,"
called for dismantling the camps entirely. Lawson told
Workers World, "The people aren't illegal; the camps are."
He added that protesters at Woomera would engage in peaceful
civil disobedience to "use their bodies to enforce
international law."

Under the 1951 Geneva Convention on the Status of Refugees,
Australia is obliged to provide sanctuary. At least 120
refugees are on a hunger strike at Woomera. Some have sewn
their lips together in protest at being held incommunicado,
while others have dug symbolic graves for themselves in the
sand and are sleeping in them.

The teachers' federation in the state of New South Wales has
called for the children in detention centers to be allowed
to attend public schools. The federation condemns the denial
of education for refugee children as "a violation of Article
28 of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the
Child."

Australia is also being condemned internationally. So
seriously does Amnesty International take the situation that
the current president, Irene Khan, felt compelled to
investigate personally. It's the first time an Amnesty
president has come to Australia. Khan's accusation that the
Howard government is trying "to create a climate of
suspicion, mistrust, xenophobia and racism" was quoted by
the British Broadcasting Company.

The Howard government, however, feels emboldened by the Bush
administration's racist and xenophobic campaign that is
providing a cover for U.S. aggression in Asia and the Arab
world.

- END -

(Copyright Workers World Service: Everyone is permitted to
copy and distribute verbatim copies of this document, but
changing it is not allowed. For more information contact
Workers World, 55 W. 17 St., NY, NY 10011; via e-mail:
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[log in to unmask] Web: http://www.workers.org)

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