BY JON LAND
Pressure is mounting against the federal government's moves to deport
1600-1800 East Timorese asylum seekers, some of whom have been seeking
refugee status for up to 10 years. At least 84 may be forced to leave by
the end of December.
The claims for refugee status of many of the asylum seekers are in the
final stages of appeal; a considerable number have received notification
from the department of immigration stating that their claims have been
rejected.
On November 19, the Senate passed a motion passed calling on the minister
for immigration, Phillip Ruddock, to grant the East Timorese asylum seekers
special visas on humanitarian grounds. The motion was supported by Labor,
the Democrats and the Greens senators.
The motion noted that the processing of the Timorese asylum seekers'
claims for refugee status had put on hold for many years and that the Australian
government had deliberately delayed final determinations. The motion also
recognised that many of the applicants are suffering the effects of trauma
and torture. The Senate acknowledged that many of these people have lived
in Australia for up to 10 years and have become part of the Australian
community.
A report in the November 18 Sydney Morning Herald revealed that
an internal Refugee Review Tribunal memo issued in 1995 had referred to
a moratorium on the processing of refugee applications from East Timorese.
This moratorium was in place until April.
The attempts by East Timorese in 1994 and 1995 to seek refugee status
came in the midst of a concerted push by the then Labor federal government
to forge closer military, diplomatic and business ties with the Suharto
dictatorship. Acknowledging that the East Timorese had a right to refugee
status would have jeopardised this process.
Speaking on the popular ABC radio program Australia Talks Back on
November 20, Andrew McNaughton, convenor for the Australia East
Timor Association (NSW) explained: “Almost certainly, from all of the evidence,
[the asylum seekers] would have been found to have been refugees if their
claims were processed in a timely manner in the mid- to late-1990s... But
because they have been held in limbo for up to 10 years or even more ...
now the government says, you're not a refugee anymore, so go back.”
“The bigger picture of the conditions in East Timor, of the relationship
between Australia and East Timor and the fact that these people have put
down roots and really weren't fairly dealt with in the first place supports
a more sensible conclusion that they be allowed to stay”, McNaughton said.
Callers to the program unanimously supported the creation of a special
humanitarian visa.
East Timorese political and community leaders have also called on Canberra
to not deport the asylum seekers. In an interview on ABC radio's Asia
Pacific program on November 18, East Timorese leader Jose Ramos Horta
stated: “They have been in legal limbo for so many years in Australia...
Most of them will return to East Timor without money, because they were
not able to work, and without qualifications because they were not given
the opportunity to study or to be trained. So their contribution to East
Timor will be very, very negligible... They will be a burden to society
here.”
Church groups, human rights and solidarity organisations have pledged
to step up support for the asylum seekers. A sanctuary network established
in the late-1990s may be reactivated if the government moves ahead with
the deportations.
Action in Solidarity with Asia and the Pacific chairperson Max Lane,
while supporting the call for special visas for the asylum seekers, believes
that more should be done: “These asylum seekers, as were all the people
of East Timor, are the victims of one of the most brutal wars and military
occupations of the 20th century. It was backed by successive Australian
governments. The least the federal government could do is to create a special
visa category for all East Timorese, entitling them to full employment,
study and welfare rights in Australia.”
From Green Left Weekly, November 27, 2002.
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