Get the message: No Advantage! Right?
Cartoon: Eureka Street |
Potential
visitors to Australia can watch You Tubes showing majestic landscapes and fine
shopping. ‘Please come,’ they say,
‘stay and enjoy our beautiful country’s advantages.’
Now there’s
another program available, though carrying a starkly different message. Titled: No Advantage the 40-second
clips are pitched to the foreign asylum seekers in Indonesia keen to cross the
Indian Ocean but facing tough new laws designed to swamp their plans.
Instead of
making it to Sydney they’ll be sent to Manus Island off the northern coast of
Papua New Guinea, and the Micronesian island of Nauru.
This tiny
South Pacific nation was once known as Pleasant Island, but the videos don’t
feature slim couples downing cocktails before dashing into shimmering surf.
Instead the
images show basic barrack-style accommodation designed to show that life in
these poor and isolated outposts will be bleak and boring. There’ll be guards
and wire fences.
Just in
case viewers don’t get the message a stern male voice says “No Advantage” five
times.
Nauru, a
textbook example of a failed state, has only 10,000 residents, but will house
an expected 1,500 asylum seekers. No shopping malls, little to do, nowhere to
go. Better stay in Indonesia patiently waiting to leave when officially
approved.
But will
the 4,000 registered – and a similar number of unregistered - Afghans Iraqis
and Sri Lankans, packed in cheap hotels around the Archipelago and sustained by
international aid pittances, watch and take heed?
Unlikely.
More than 1,000 men, women and children have drowned trying to reach Australia
since 2001 – the latest last month. (Aug)
Such awful deaths should deter all but the most desperate from
clambering aboard decrepit fishing boats crewed by kids – but they don’t.
Political
and religious freedom, high wages and quality lifestyles make Australia a
magnet for the persecuted and fearful.
Along with the US, Canada and a few north European countries, Australia
is the great refuge, the promised land of opportunity and safety, work and
welfare – a destination worth a few years on a little island, for everyone
knows the wait won’t be forever.
The videos
are the latest strategy in a complex series of policies rapidly introduced and
passed last month (Aug) by the Australian Parliament.
They follow
the release of a 162-page report compiled by a three-man expert committee
appointed by the government. This was
headed by former defence chief Angus Houston and supported by refugee
advocate Paris Aristotle and foreign affairs academic Michael L'Estrange. It was a trio of such integrity and
authority that its views had to be taken seriously.
They were, breaking the deadlock that has gripped Australian
politics for the last few years as the boats kept coming. Foreign Affairs
Minister Bob Carr has forecast 180,000 boat people a year if the deterrents
don’t work.
Houston said his 22 recommendation report was: “Hard-headed,
but not hard-hearted; that practicality and fairness should take precedence
over theory and inertia; and that the perfect should not be allowed to become
the enemy of the good.”
In brief those with money to buy passage on a boat will no
longer have a headstart over those with equal or better claims for resettlement
but no dollars or desire to risk their lives.
Refugee support groups remain unhappy even though numbers
accepted will immediately jump from 13,500 to 20,000 a year.
The previous government of Liberal John Howard shunted
asylum seekers off to Nauru and Manus. The boats stopped coming, but the
refugees eventually got to Australia and the camps closed.
The Jakarta-based people traffickers reopened their
businesses after 2007. In that year the
Labor Party took office and dumped Howard’s so-called Pacific Solution claiming
it was cruel to make people wait years to be processed.
But that’s now their fate.
Boat people will remain in Nauru and Manus for as long as they’d stay in
Indonesia or Malaysia if waiting to access what the Houston report calls “regular migration pathways and
established international arrangement
More likely to deter is a stop to family reunions through
the special humanitarian program for those arriving by boat. In the past men who’ve made the trip and got
permanent residence then called in their relatives.
Houston also recommends “bilateral cooperation on
asylum seeker issues with Indonesia be advanced as a matter of urgency.”
This reinvents the wheel. Indonesia and Australia already have
long-standing talk tanks. They include
the Bali Process on People Smuggling, co-chaired by Indonesia and
Australia. It has 46 members and has
been in place since 2002.
How effective? The figures speak: In the
past ten years about 410 boats carrying around 25,000 people have sailed to
Australia. In the week following
Canberra’s acceptance of the Houston recommendations nine boats quit Indonesia
and delivered their human cargo.
If you’d still like to visit the Great
South Land and cuddle a koala don’t be deterred by all this negativity. Provided you’ve got the cash for a holiday,
a visa and intention to return home you’re welcome. Just don’t come by boat.
(First published in The Jakarta Post 13 Sept 2012)
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