MEDIA
RELEASE - WORLD REFUGEE DAY RALLYSunday 17 June 2007 MELBOURNE |
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A large turnout is expected at todays World Refugee Day rally to oppose the new multi-million dollar detention centre due to open later this year on remote Christmas Island. Greens Senator Kerry Nettle will address the crowd, as will Refugee and Immigration Legal Centre coordinator David Manne, who recently visited refugees detained on Nauru. Refugees will then take to the stage to tell their own stories. The rally will begin at 12pm outside Melbourne Museum (Cnr Nicholson and Victoria Sts, Carlton), before marching to join Multicultural Arts Victoria's Emerge Festival at Fitzroy Town Hall. Colourful and provocative installations, street theatre and personal stories will be used to celebrate the courage of refugees, and to highlight the cruelty of the Howard Government's refugee policies. The rally follows this weeks presentation in Federal Parliament of a petition of over 10,000 signatures calling on the Federal Government to halt construction of the new Guantanamo Bay-style facility on Christmas Island. The petition was co-sponsored by Victorias Refugee Action Collective, the National Council of Churches, A Just Australia and the Asylum Seeker Resource Centre. The petition and the rally serve as reminders to the major parties that Australians have not forgotten Tampa, and will not stand for a return to the politics of fear as another election approaches. RAC spokesperson Tim Petterson said: At todays rally ordinary Australians will show their opposition to a new 500 million dollar detention centre, due to open later this year on remote Christmas Island."
"Two years ago, at the very time the Howard Government announced it would release children from detention and make its refugee policies more humane, it was drawing up plans for this high-tech detention centre that includes a babies compound."
"More than 10,000
people have signed a petition opposing this centre. The mandatory detention
of refugees and asylum seekers is an affront to human dignity. We will
continue to repeat the message for as long as it takes: refugees should
be welcomed, not jailed. Media enquiries:
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