Rock
against Racism - 24 November 2001
A DAY TO TAKE TO THE
STREETS FOR A MASSIVE CONCERT OUTSIDE THE MARIBYRNONG DETENTION CENTRE
1PM TO 5PM, SATURDAY
24 NOVEMBER
MARIBYRNONG DETENTION CENTRE
53 Hampstead Road (82 tram from Ftscry Station)
Come and enjoy some
of Melbourne's best bands as they donate their time & talent in a
statement against racism, in the heart of Melbourne's shame... our local
camp, a prison for 80 people whose only crime is to flee desperate situations.
Features Snout, Brown
Hornet, Euphonia, Moondriven and many more, stay tuned for details...
For leaflet and more details, see also the RACWEST page
Phone 9689 9867 for
more information
Organised by Refugee
Action Collective(West)
Appeal for gifts
RAC (WEST) invites
people planning to come to the Rock Against Racism on Nov 24 to bring
gifts or Christmas presents for detainees and asylum seekers in our community.
The gifts will be collected at the event & given to the Asylum Seekers
Resource Centre to distribute amongst people in detention and those on
temporary visas living throughout melbourne... any good quality toys,
clothes, even movie vouchers etc etc are welcome, but please do not wrap
them.
There will also be
an opportunity to write messages to the detainees during the rock against
racism.
Finally, although
the concert is "free", we are requesting that people bring some
money to donate, even if only a few coins. This is necessary because of
costs incurred by the sound system, stage & council requirements.
Don't worry if you've
got no money or gifts. We still hope for your company on what looks like
being a fantastic day.
Posters & leaflets
are available from New International bookshop in Trades Hall, cnr of Lygon
& Elizabeth Sts, or the Resistance bookshop at Level 5, 407 Swanston
St, Melb, opposite RMIT.
CONCERT AND PARTY
TO RAISE MONEY FOR THE AFGHANISTAN REFUGEE CRISIS
Preston Town Hall
cnr High St and Gower St, Preston
at 3 pm on Sunday 25 November
Featuring fabulous
musicians:
Kavisha Mazzella
Doug de Vries and Diana Clark
Borboleta
Crying in Public Places
Carl Pannuzzo
Petrunka
Phil Bywater and The Great Unwashed
Totally Gourdgeous
Tumbarumba
Tickets: $15 full,
$10 conc
Drinks and Snacks available.
GROUP BOOKINGS: 9386 8456
All proceeds will go to Oxfam Community Aid Abroad's Afghan Refugee Crisis
Appeal
2-3 December, Melbourne
Uni Student Union
National Student and Community Conference against War and Racism
Organising Collective
meetings held on Mondays, 7.30 pm, New Council Chambers, Trades Hall
Refugee activists
will be involved in organising this conference, along with a really broad
range of other groups. Contact Kate Davison, National Education Officer,
National Union of Students, 0413 041 083 or 9650 8908, fax 9650 8906.
Asylum Seeker Fundraising
Banquet and Party
The Asylum Seeker
Resource Centre in Footscray will be holding a fundraiser on 8 December
at St Augustine's Parish Hall, 61 Somerville Road, Yarraville. There will
be vegetarian and vegan food, music, and a bar selling drinks. For more
information call the Centre on 9687 2134 between 11am and 5pm Mon - Weds
and Saturdays. More details here closer to the date.
Announcements
From Australians Against
Racism
MANY AUSTRALIANS DO
NOT AGREE WITH WHAT AUSTRALIA IS DOING TO ASYLUM SEEKERS, DETAINEES AND
REFUGEES.
Please read this and
forward this statement to everyone you know who could be involved.
Note: the initiators
of this action have issued an appeal for help with processing responses,
and also for people with expertise in media, marketing etc. If you are
willing and able to help, please send details - contact and area of expertise
- to marianahardwick@bigpond.com
We are a group of
Australians not associated with any particular political party or group
who are deeply concerned by the mounting mistreatment of people of Middle
Eastern origin in Australia and by the culture of acquiescence to this
that is being encouraged by our leaders.
We believe that many
Australians would not accept what is being done in their name if they
had more information and less manipulation of their fears. We want to
highlight shared humanity and help dissolve destructive and dehumanising
'us and them' divisions. We wish to use the mainstream media to bring
out the voices of the many Australians who feel the same way as we do
and to raise awareness of dissent.
Australians Against
Racism is a non-profit organisation formed by us to achieve these objectives.
Independent voices
of concern were printed in a two page statement with signatories in the
Weekend Australian on October 6th, organised by a similar (unrelated)
group of people in NSW. It is essential that the issues then raised do
not fade from public view and the significance of the fact that concerned
Australians are prepared to contribute and fund such statements is not
ignored..
We want to raise the
profile of these voices by airing a statement as a TV commercial in prime
time. This statement will help to keep attention on alternative voices
and the fact that many Australians are not happy with the Government and
the Opposition's handling of asylum seekers and refugees. A print statement
with all signatories and contributors to the commercial who wish to be
named will then be sent to ministers, shadow ministers and print media,
with a press release, drawing attention to the significant objection this
action represents.
The 30 second TV announcement
is being produced at cost by a prominent Melbourne production company
which has donated its services and expertise to this endeavour. It will
then require FACTS approval before going to air. We would like to run
it in all states but will run it to the extent that donated funds permit
soon after the election. To run the statement will require around $6,000
per airing in 60 Minutes (for example). We are negotiating a deal with
a media producer/ buyer for a budget of $30,000, covering a range of prime
time programs in as many major cities as contributions allow. Any excess
funds will be donated to organisations such as the Australian Refugees
Association in South Australia, where Woomera detainees first enter the
community. If we do not receive sufficient funds to achieve this goal,
all funds will be donated to the nominated refugees associations.
We are asking signatories
to contribute $50, more if you wish. The statement and script follow.
If you wish to be part of this please print and fill in the attached form
and return to the address below.
Mariana Hardwick
Eva Sallis
AUSTRALIANS AGAINST
RACISM
DRAFT TELEVISION STATEMENT
SCENE
A large passing crowd
on a busy Australian city mall.
The camera zooms in
on an elderly female passerby and action slows.
VOICE OVER: Maybe
she came from Poland, and is a sole survivor
Crowd. Focus on middle
aged white man, going the other way.
VOICE OVER: Maybe
he arrived from Croatia only a few years ago
Crowd. Focus on passing
young Vietnamese student.
VOICE OVER: Maybe
she arrived by boat in her mother's arms.
Passing crowd.
Zoom in and reveal
Middle Eastern girl. She looks lost and bewildered.
The crowd continues.
ignoring her.
VOICE OVER: What would
it take for you to run with your family?
What if it was you?
FADE TO BLACK
VOICE OVER (WORDS
AND TEXT, white on black): HOW CAN WE SAY NO?
TEXT: Funded by [number]
Australians who are against the abuse of asylum seekers.
BLANK SCREEN STATEMENT
and voice: AUTHORISED and spoken by E. Sallis, Australians Against Racism,
Collingwood, Victoria
DRAFT TEXT to be sent
to ministers and shadow ministers' offices and all print media with a
press release regarding the TV commercial and our concerns.
This week we the undersigned
have funded and run a statement on primetime commercial television expressing
concern and outrage at the Government's treatment of asylum seekers and
the Opposition's acquiescence to it.
We do not support
the Government or the Opposition in their actions and policies regarding
refugees and asylum seekers inside Australia and outside Australia.
We do not agree with
what is being done in our name in the national or international community.
We do not agree with
deterring so-called people smugglers by creating living scarecrows. Mistreating
people in order to deter others from coming directly contravenes UNHCR
regulations.
We do not accept that
the cost of the detention system to the Australian taxpayer is necessary
or justifiable. The government has spent over $200 Million in placing
people in Nauru and other parts of the Pacific and often more than $100,000
per person in detention in Australia in order to make their scarecrows.
Following the UNHCR regulations and the International Refugee Convention
would be far cheaper.
We call for an end
to all verbal vilification and dehumanising language used by both parties
and their ministers and in the media when referring to people coming to
Australia as asylum seekers. 'Boat people' is a demeaning term in Australian
slang. Human beings cannot be 'earmarked' for various camps. Human beings
cannot be 'processed', a term which should be exclusively used to refer
to applications not persons. Nothing can justify the irresponsible suggestion
that asylum seekers might be terrorists, or the repeated disregard for
our racial vilification laws. More than 90% of detainees are found to
be genuine refugees and released into the community on protection VISAS.
They will have to deal with ongoing negative attitudes which have been
fostered first of all by our leaders.
We call for all exploitation
of recent terrible world events at the expense of the people who are most
vulnerable to cease. Linking all refugees with issues of national security
in order to get the public to accept dehumanising and mistreating them
is immoral and self-serving.
We wish to remind
all Australians that the consequences of systematic dehumanisation of
one racial or religious group in a society can be horrific.
We call for closure
of all detention facilities in which innocent men women and children are
humiliated and incarcerated for indefinite periods of time.
We call for Parliament
to repeal laws which could allow a government department to abuse human
rights without being answerable to the law.
We call for transparency
and answerability in all DIMA's dealings with asylum seekers. If asylum
seekers are to be detained, we ask for a detention which complies with
international Human Rights regulations and which is subject to scrutiny
from independent legal, social and medical experts and with full disclosure
and information provided both to the Australian public and to applicants
for asylum.
Many of us who are
financially able and have space in our homes are willing to provide for
an individual or a family of people who are seeking asylum while their
applications are processed.
[list of signatories
by state]
Please print off and
fill in the following and post with your donation to Australians Against
Racism, PO Box 1109, Collingwood VIC 3066
Name
Address
Email
Name as you wish it to appear in the statement. Leave blank if you do
not wish to be named.
Donation $
Please make cheques payable to Australians Against Racism or deposit electronically
to National Bank BSB: 083184 Account number: 53 593-5689
Account name: Australians Against Racism.
To download the above
form as aar_form.doc, please click here
Contact if you have
any queries: Eva Sallis
eva.sallis@adelaide.edu.au
Mariana Hardwick
marianahardwick@bigpond.com
From the Gippsland
group
The Gippsland branch
of RAC, which meets every Wednesday at 1.00pm in Room 4N148, Monash University,
Gippsland Campus, Churchill( Coordinator: Marianne Robinson, phone 5122
6320 or 9902 6320 email: marianne.robinson@arts.monash.edu.au) are interviewing
local politicians this week on the subject of asylum seekers.
Media release from
the Brotherhood: 18 October
Indigenous, Refugee Human Rights Still Being Violated - Judge
Human rights in Australia
are being violated every day according to former High Court judge, Justice
Marcus Einfeld in a public speech in Melbourne last night. Delivering
the 20th annual Sambell Oration for leading welfare agency the Brotherhood
of St Laurence, Justice Einfeld cited mandatory sentencing, our treatment
of refugees and our treatment of children and youth as examples of such
human rights violations.
Our generation has
its own quite new Stolen Children saga to confront," he said, attributing
this to the high incarceration rates among young indigenous people, caused
by mandatory sentencing which he labelled "compulsory jailing".
He said Australia's
new methods for handling refugees were in breach of international law
and displayed 'arrogance' and 'ignorance'. Justice Einfeld also labelled
the so-called 'War on Terrorism' a 'propaganda offensive'.
Praising the new Northern
Territory government's decision to remove mandatory sentencing laws, he
questioned where funding made available to help avoid deaths in custody
was being spent.
"What use has
been made by the Northern Territory and Western Australia of the significant
federal funds - millions of dollars - made available to deal with the
300 odd recommendations of the Royal Commission on the Aboriginal Deaths
in Custody, largely designed to avoid or minimise the incarceration of
Aborigines on minor charges?" he said.
Justice Einfeld also
made extensive reference to Australia's treatment of refugees. If Australia
was involved in military ventures that created refugees, and then it had
an ethical obligation to accept their requests for asylum, he said.
"To label them
as actual or potential terrorists, because some of them come from Afghanistan,
as some of our politicians and others have recently done, demonstrates
breathtaking arrogance, displays appalling ignorance and plays shameful
and unashamed politics," he said.
Referring to the September
11 attacks in the United States, Justice Einfeld said no political cause
could ever justify deliberate unprovoked killing of innocent men, women
and children. But he said it was necessary to attack the root causes of
crime, such as poverty, injustice, inhumanity, intolerance and hate.
"The current
so-called war against terrorism is nothing of the kind. It is propaganda
offensive to appease a nation in fear and grief, not least because its
power has not saved it's people and territory from mortal attack and tragedy,
and because of the belated recognition that power alone can and will never
do so."
Justice Einfeld called
for Australians not to be "paralysed by fear or apathy into ditching
our traditional morality and kindness" and called for "major
attitudinal change by leaders in government and the community".
Brotherhood Executive
Director Father Nic Frances hailed Justice Einfeld's speech and called
on an incoming federal government to show the political will necessary
to tackle the issue of human rights violation occurring in Australia.
"This country
could be leading the world in showing care for all its citizens,"
said Fr Frances. " Instead we are evoking world criticism, and spending
the budget surplus, on trying to avoid our international human rights
obligations by forcing small island nations to take asylum seekers, whose
claims are more than likely to be assessed as genuine and who will end
up in Australia anyway.
"Now with a promised
troop deployment, it seems even more necessary to accept some sort of
an obligation to the innocent people who will inevitably be displaced
in the this conflict."
The full text of the
20th Annual Brotherhood of St Laurence annual Sambell Oration, 'Wake up
Australia, the new world order: the human dimension', by Justice Marcus
Einfeld, is available from: www.bsl.org.au. For more information, contact
Helen Westerman, Media Officer, Brotherhood of St Laurence, on (03) 9483
1371 or mob: 0413 948 535.
CD "Scattered
People"
Received 29 August
from Chris Gibbings(chrisgibbings@email.com):
Asylum seeker CD
wins music award
Simon Monsour and
Brian Procopis have received the award for Best Producer at the 2001 Sunnie
Awards of the Queensland Recording Association for their work on the album
"Scattered People". It is a fitting reward for the efforts of
two hard working, humble and generous people. It is also a great tribute
to their talent. Their efforts came out of Simon's home studio and yet
beat a field including some of the most well equipped production studios
in Queensland.
The album evolved
out of refugee claimants (asylum seekers) in Brisbane coming together
to sing - finding and sharing their 'common ground' - their brokenness,
their resilience, their frustrations and their hopes for the future. Songs
were written and performed. Friends of the Refugee Claimants Support Centre
contributed their songs as well and the CD was launched in late 2000.
One of the songs "Labarik
Sira Hotu" has become well known in East Timor as the song used by
the United Nations in their advertisements to encourage people to vote
in the August 2001 elections. Afonso Corte Real, a Timorese Australian,
was nominated for a Sunnie Award for this song.
The Scattered People
CD was also nominated for the Sunnie Award for Best Album - Folk/Ethnic/Other.
Tragically, some members
of the choir have been refused protection in Australia and have been forced
to return to the countries from which they had escaped. We all fear for
their safety. The Refugee Claimants Support Centre Choir has since disintegrated,
its members demoralized, disempowered or deported. But their voices and
their spirit carry on in this CD.
Many refugee claimants
in Australia are denied work permission, language classes, access to health
services and basic financial support while they undergo a prolonged wait
(often years) for their fate to be determined. As legislation becomes
increasingly harsh, the Refugee Claimants Support Centre struggles with
extremely limited resources to provide assistance. We rely entirely on
donations and fund-raising activities for the money to provide emergency
relief assistance to clients. All profits from the sale of the Scattered
People CD go to projects that assist refugee claimants. You can buy the
CD from: the Good Shepherd Trading Circle (in Brisbane and Melbourne,
I think), the Refugee Claimants Support Centre (in Brisbane, Tel: (07)
3357 9013, email: refugees@ecn.net.au), or the Scattered People website
online http://www.brisbane-stories.webcentral.com.au/scatteredpeople You
can also listen to the CD on this website.
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