So,
What's Actually Changed?
Refugee policy was headed for a shakeup with the change
of government in 2007. Five months in to the Labor Government, what has
and hasn't changed?
David Sparkes
23 April 2008
"This is the
heart of us. It is the heart of who we are as Australians. The way we
treat the most vulnerable people determines who we can be. But we're not
out of the woods and so far we don't have a government who looks like
it will lead us out of the woods."
Pamela Curr speaks
passionately. She is the policy coordinator at the Asylum Refugee Centre
and is involved intimately with the people she considers amongst "the
most vulnerable people".
Five months ago, refugee
advocates like Pamela dared to dream. For the previous decade they had
seen themselves as locked in battle. John Howard's Government had devoted
a large chunk of its social rhetoric to the issue of border protection.
To suggest that the Coalition's hard-line on asylum seekers was unpopular
would be only half-true. To say it contributed to the downfall of an immovable
political force would be speculation. But for thousands of Australians
who campaigned against the Coalition Government's refugee policies, the
election result on the 24 November 2007 must have felt like a victory.
Mr Howard's tenure
came to a spectacular end and Kevin Rudd was moving in to the Lodge. Just
whether "Kevin 07" really was the answer to the prayers of refugee
campaigners was unclear. At the very least, he certainly seemed humanitarian.
The Labor Party's election campaign had focused its "have-a-heart"
mentality on industrial relations and other issues that would have an
impact on the domestic, middle-class front. On immigration reform, Labor's
platform was hardly revolutionary, but it did chip away at the outer shell
of Mr Howard's ideology.
The morning after
the election, the battle might have seemed over. But five months into
the Labor Government, what has changed in Australia's refugee policy?
What has not changed? It's hard to keep track.
Pamela says, "I'm
opening letters and e-mails, particularly from RAR groups (Rural Australians
for Refugees) and others saying, 'Look, this is it! It's over, isn't it?
It's finished. We can move on to other things.' The fact is it's really
not over by a long shot."There is a tendency when a Labor government
gets into power for the community to breathe a sigh of relief. But, unfortunately
when you've had, as we've had, an extremely right-wing government, we
are not going to get a left-wing government following it. And we haven't."
When assessing the
extent of change under the Labor government, it is worth taking a look
at the list of what they actually promised during the election campaign;
The promise to abolish the Pacific Solution was the spit and polish on
Labor's humanitarian credentials. They also promised to abolish Temporary
Protection Visas. They indicated that they would investigate the possibility
of work-rights for asylum seekers living in the community. They said they
would return detention centres to public ownership and operation. They
said they would reverse the Coalition's decision to excise 4,600 Australian
islands from the migration zone.
Beyond all these promises,
there was an expectation among many that a Rudd government would bring
about a change in philosophy. Anna Samson, from the Refugee Council of
Australia, says, "Generally, and I think this is what a lot of people
were clinging to, a more compassionate approach to the question of refugee
protection (is what Labor promised)."
But this promise of
a more "humanitarian" approach was coupled with an unequivocal
promise to continue the hardline on border protection. On the eve of the
election, senior Labor figures reaffirmed that they would turn back asylum
seekers in seaworthy boats and send others to Christmas Island for processing.
Labor Deputy Leader, Julia Gillard said, "We are tough on border
security. You have to be. We've always said that if people arrive unauthorised,
they will have to be detained for health, security and identity checks."
The election was run
and won. So, from that moment on, what has actually happened?
Within three months
of taking office, Labor came good on its promise to scrap the Pacific
Solution, closing the detention centres on Manus Island (in Papua New
Guinea) and Nauru. David Manne is co-ordinator of the Refugee and Immigration
Legal Centre and worked with some of the asylum seekers being processed
on Nauru. While David welcomes the closure of the Nauru detention centre,
he also questions whether the Pacific Solution is completely buried.
"The problem
remains," he says. "The Pacific Solution itself - it's crucial
to understand that it formed a fundamental foundation of the whole architecture
(of the Howard Government's refugee policy). It was front and centre of
that architecture. It has ended but unfortunately the house has not completely
been demolished because we now have what I would call the Indian Ocean
solution."
"That is, many
of the most problematic and objectionable aspects of the Pacific Solution
have in effect been imported back in to our own territory (in the Indian
Ocean)."
Also part of the Pacific
Solution was the decision by the Howard Government in 2003 to excise 4,600
islands from Australia's immigration zone. The islands remained Australian
territory but the decision meant that asylum seekers who reached those
islands (including Christmas Island) were considered to be "offshore"
and their claims for asylum were not dealt with under Australian law.
Labor pledged to return the islands to the migration zone, with the exception
of Christmas Island, Ashmore Reef and Cocos Islands. The pledge was reiterated
at a Labor conference in 2007 when the then immigration spokesperson,
Tony Burke, said, "We would return them (the 4,600 islands) to the
migration zone."
But by early 2008
refugee advocates were beginning to doubt whether the changes would actually
take place. On 22 April this year, David Manne said that, as far as he
is aware, it is now stated Labor policy not to reverse that Coalition
policy.
"We still have
this peculiar policy and law in our country that parts of our territory
will be dehumanised." He said, "That is, they will be places
where human rights will apply a little bit or not at all depending on
the political discretion of the day.
"There are places
(within Australian territory) where people don't have access to Australian
law for the purposes of pursuing what is a fundamentally legal question.
That is, 'Do you meet the definition of a refugee?'"
On the question of
Temporary Protection Visas (TPVs), the government recently fulfilled its
promise to abolish them, having been in power for six months. The tardiness
in coming through on this promise drew heavy criticism from frustrated
refugee advocates. In April, David Manne said, "We're now how many
months (into the Labor government)? Five months? And every day for a TPV
holder is another day of damage for people in that situation. It's like
a second wave of suffering by the policy, and nothing has happened yet."
Well, it did happen
eventually, and for that the minister is receiving some credit from his
critics.
On work-rights for
asylum seekers living in the community, no policy change has come about
yet, but it has to be said that the Minister for Immigration, Senator
Chris Evans, does appear genuinely committed making reforms that will
allow some work-rights for asylum seekers. At a senate estimates committee
on 19 March 2008 he said:
"I think
the current system is indefensible. We do need to have a situation that
is much more coherent and caring than one which does plan for people
to be destitute out in the community without the capacity to work and
earn a living or be in receipt of benefits. The solution to this issue
is very much, I think, focused around people's work-rights and access
to benefits. I am very focused on trying to fix this issue. It is something
that I regard as a priority and hope to have resolved, at least in part,
fairly quickly."
If the minister does
achieve such reform, it would represent a concrete change from his predecessor.
Another fundamental
shift from the previous government is that Senator Evans has committed
himself to clearing the list of long-term detainees. In March he vowed
to "personally examine" the cases of 61 long-term detainees
and have their cases resolved by the end of April. It is unclear whether
that deadline has been met.
On the election promise
to return detention centres to public ownership and operation, Senator
Evans has been slow to act. At a Senate Legal and Constitutional Affairs
Committee hearing held on February 19, 2008, the minister offered this
by way of explanation for the continuing involvement of private contractors:
"The tenders
for the renewing of the contract had been underway under the previous
government and they are fairly well advanced. Currently I am considering
how we handle that matter; whether we continue with the renewal of the
contract or not, given the stage of negotiations and the costs already
incurred."
Once again, watch
this space.
But what about things
the Labor Government pledged not to change? Mandatory detention, making
asylum seekers pay back the costs of their own incarceration, boat-interception
and repulsion and offshore detention centres have all been seamlessly
carried over from one government to the next. Which brings us back to
the question - how much has refugee policy changed under the Labor Government?
"There is a sense, even among those who are very well informed and
care, that post-Howard, things will probably be all right." says
David Manne. "That maybe they are even all right now. Nothing could
be further from the truth.
"Reform has really
been limited and largely restricted to bureaucratic processes rather than
policy."
Anna Samson, who deals
with senior figures in the Department of Immigration, is slightly more
optimistic; "It's important to highlight the change in attitude within
the department and within the minister's office. I have to say that (since
the change of government) there has been a distinct change both in the
demeanour and the approach of people in the Department of Immigration.
"This isn't to
say that the kinds of reforms or the issues that surround overall cultural
change at the department have been resolved. And it's very difficult for
that to occur so long as the legislation and the policies that are put
in place don't actually allow for that change to occur."
Pamela Curr says that while she believes there has been some "progress",
fundamental similarities remain between the previous and current governments.
"We've (still) got Christmas Island, and that is a big worry. The
worry is that if we get a big boat, we'll be back to business as usual,"
she says, alluding to the famous Tampa incident in 2001.
If anything, Labor
has shown renewed enthusiasm for Christmas Island as a detention facility.
A brand new detention centre is being built there at an estimated cost
of $500 million. And the Labor Government's enthusiasm for mandatory detention
is not limited by the boundaries of Australian territory.
"We're building
detention centres in Indonesia." Pamela says. "Makassar (Quarantine
Prison in South Sulawesi) was built by the Australians. There is another
one (in Indonesia). We've so far not been able to locate where it is,
but we know from documents online that it is there."
The verdict from those intimately involved in this debate is clear; some
change has occurred, but at the moment you have to squint your eyes to
tell the difference.
The Labor Government
is attempting a political balancing act. On one hand it wants to appear
more "humanitarian" than its predecessor. On the other hand
it desperately wants to avoid subjecting itself to mainstream fears about
a perceived flood of refugees, the same fears that cost it an election
in 2001. Perhaps the scars from that election defeat still run deep and
continue to affect Labor policy. If you want to know where the government's
refugee policy is headed, you'll have to watch this space.
David Sparkes
is a journalism student at Deakin University
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