Students support refugees, bureaucrats block action

June 12, 2002
Issue 

BY STUART MUNCKTON

CANBERRA — More than 100 students attended the Australian National University Students' Association May 27 annual general meeting, at which students voted to make opposition to mandatory detention and support for asylum seekers official policy of the ANU SA. Unfortunately, the students’ desire to support refugees was partly blocked by ANU SA office-bearers at the meeting.

The success of the pro-refugee motion — at the largest ANU SA meeting held for many years — was the culmination of intense campaigning for refugees’ rights by the socialist youth group Resistance. It was also endorsed by the ANU Refugee Action Committee, the Environment, Women's and Education Collectives, the Sexuality officer and the ANU Muslim Association.

Aside from committing the ANU SA to oppose mandatory detention of asylum seekers, the motion initially would have committed the ANU SA to donate $500 to the ACT Refugee Action Committee — to help escaped refugees — and to call a referendum in second semester to make the campus a “Refugee Safe Zone”.

From the beginning, ANU SA officials attempted to sabotage the meeting and the refugee motion. First, they called the meeting with the minimum notice time. Second, they called it for a Monday at 3pm, when few students are on campus.

At the meeting, the obstruction continued. Refugee activists had asked Barbara Rogalla, a nurse who had worked inside Woomera detention centre, to describe to the meeting the conditions within refugee detention centres during the discussion around the motion. However, members of the Young Liberals and right-wing ALP faction Student Unity joined SA officials from the careerist student faction the Independents in voting against students hearing her.

While the motion to allow Rogalla to speak, moved at the beginning of the meeting, was supported by more than 50% of students present, SA general secretary and meeting chairperson Tom O'Callaghan ruled that a two-thirds majority was needed for such a motion, and thus declared it failed.

The pro-refugee motion itself was not discussed until 4.30pm. By the time it came up, a number of refugees’ rights supporters had had to leave, changing the balance of the meeting considerably.

The first section of the refugee motion, committing the SA to oppose mandatory detention, was passed by an overwhelming majority. However, sections donating money to escaping refugees were defeated, because the Independents, the Young Liberals and Student Unity all opposed it.

Although these factions’ members argued they were opposing the clause because it committed the ANU SA to break the law, when the motion was amended to donate the money simply to the ANU Refugee Action Committee (which is raising money to assist escaped refugees), they still opposed it.

The behaviour of these students got worse. O’Callahan, a member of the Independents, refused to even put the section of the motion calling for a student referendum, ruling its wording was out of order. He refused to consider amendments to “fix” the wording.

Nevertheless, the motion’s mover, Resistance member Brett Muller, thinks the meeting was “a step forward for the refugees’ rights campaign”.

“The students who came to the meeting to support refugees, the hundreds of students who have donated money to escaped refugees in defiance of the law, and the number of groups who came behind the pro-refugee motion show how high support is among students for asylum seekers”, he said. “Resistance is determined to build even greater support next semester.”

From Green Left Weekly, June 5, 2002.
Visit the Green Left Weekly home page. 

You need Green Left, and we need you!

Green Left is funded by contributions from readers and supporters. Help us reach our funding target.

Make a One-off Donation or choose from one of our Monthly Donation options.

Become a supporter to get the digital edition for $5 per month or the print edition for $10 per month. One-time payment options are available.

You can also call 1800 634 206 to make a donation or to become a supporter. Thank you.