Australian immigration detainees launch hunger strike

Australian immigration detainees launch hunger strike

About 60 prisoners at one of Australia’s notorious immigration detention centres launched a hunger strike on March 28 to protest against a new wave of refugee deportations, including the removal to China of a 35-year-old female member of the Falun Gong sect. As of yesterday, 25 detainees were continuing the fast into its second week.

Despite receiving almost no coverage in the mainstream media, the protest at Sydney’s Villawood Detention Centre—the scene of scores of previous hunger strikes—once again serves to highlight the inhumanity of the Howard government’s mandatory detention of all asylum seekers.

Refugee activists said the Chinese woman was wanted by police in her home country for defending Falun Gong practitioners and attempting to expose their persecution. She screamed, awaking the other inmates, as at least six guards dragged her from the detention centre in her pyjamas at 4 a.m. on March 28.

The guards, employed by Global Solutions Ltd, the private company that runs the centre, were acting under the instructions of the immigration department, following the failure of two previous efforts to deport the woman. The government flouted an agreement it had made with detainees to give 48 hours’ notice of any removal.

That same night, on March 28, a Tanzanian asylum seeker was taken to hospital after slashing himself with broken glass. His condition and whereabouts remain unknown.

The hunger strikers have raised three demands: an end to forcible removals, the abolition of mandatory detention, and reports from the government on the fate of previously deported refugees, numbers of whom are known to have been killed or imprisoned on their return.

A spokeswoman for Immigration Minister Kevin Andrews has contemptuously denied any knowledge of the action. She confirmed that the woman had been placed on a flight to China, and claimed that the detention centre was calm after a “bit of noise”.

Two weeks before the Chinese woman’s removal, two other detainees were deported: a Nepalese man, locked in Villawood for three years, and a Filipino woman. Earlier in February, six people were deported from Villawood, including three Chinese asylum seekers.

On March 27, the day before the hunger strike began, up to 40 detainees protested about another Chinese national, An Xiang Tao, being confined in an isolation cell. An was isolated after being taken to hospital with head wounds that he apparently inflicted on himself when detainees were told that he was being removed to China.

An, also a Falun Gong practitioner, arrived in Australia in 2000 and had been in detention for four years before his deportation was ordered by the Federal Court earlier this year. About 100 Villawood detainees of many different nationalities formed a human blockade to prevent that taking place in late February.

The government’s forced removals are blatant violations of basic democratic rights, as well as international refugee law. It is well known that Chinese deportees face religious and political persecution in China. The Chinese government banned the Falun Gong spiritual group in 1999 and has subjected its supporters to imprisonment and various forms of repression.

An and eight other asylum seekers have taken a case to the Australian government’s Human Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission (HREOC) for human rights transgressions and racial discrimination in Villawood. The action was brought after a number of Chinese officials visited the country in 2005, and were permitted to question 24 Villawood detainees.

The interrogations gave An and other Chinese detainees even further reason to fear retribution from Beijing. An’s lawyer, Michaela Byers, told the media: “He fears that they will detain him on arrival, and that he may match someone on a data base who needs an organ transplant.” A report published last year, based on investigations undertaken by a former Canadian cabinet minister, accused Chinese authorities of killing Falun Gong practitioners and selling body parts to foreigners.

Brutal prison conditions
The conditions faced by the detainees in Villawood are nothing short of barbaric.

In October 2005, six Chinese asylum seekers held a hunger strike at Villawood for up to 55 days to protest against mandatory detention and their conditions. The protest exposed the fact that nothing had improved inside the detention centres despite cynical efforts by the Howard government to placate growing public disgust at the systematic mistreatment of asylum seekers and other so-called “illegal immigrants”.

Last November, over a hundred Chinese, Indian and Vietnamese detainees staged a 48-hour hunger strike in protest against the poor and punitive conditions, and the length of their detention. Some had been locked up for more than four years and separated from their families. Senator Amanda Vanstone, immigration minister at the time, provocatively accused the prisoners of trying to “blackmail” the government.

Detainees complained to journalists of being detained for working without permission, and then being made to work at a rate of a dollar an hour, in order to buy phone cards or cigarettes. They said the food was awful, poor in nutrition, taste and variety, despite years of complaints. They also reported that almost all detainees were being dosed with psychiatric medication.

In the same month, an inquiry on behalf of the Australian Council of Heads of Schools of Social Work into detention conditions was told by Professor Chris Goddard, director of the National Research Centre for the Prevention of Child Abuse at Monash University, that “detention centres generated universal mental ill-health never seen outside a psychiatric hospital”. The co-convener of the inquiry, Professor Linda Briskman from Curtin University, said the inquiry had been told of at least 10 people who had died in detention since 1999.

Last December, Sharif Assad, a Syrian detainee was tied to a bed in Bankstown hospital, not far from the detention centre, for six days after suffering an epileptic seizure. An independent psychologist from the Transcultural Mental Health Services who visited Assad last year recommended his release as the only way to stop his mental health deteriorating. But the Howard government rejected the recommendation.

Renewed scare campaign
In mid-2005, the well-publicised cases of two Australian residents, Cornelia Rau and Vivian Alvarez, who both suffered physical and mental abuse in detention after being wrongly locked up as “illegals”, eventually forced the government to make a deal with a group of its own backbenchers to modify the detention policy. Children and their mothers were permitted to apply for transfers to “community detention”.

This so-called compromise allowed the detention system to continue. As at March 16 this year, 617 people remained imprisoned, including 67 women and children in community detention, more than half of whom had sought refugee protection visas. Of these, 234 were in Villawood, and 82 on the Australian offshore territory of Christmas Island.

Since then, 82 Tamil refugees on Christmas Island have been transported to the remote Pacific island of Nauru. This meant re-opening the Australian-financed detention camp there, just weeks after the final departure of the last two of the hundreds of boat refugees incarcerated since 2001.

Andrews has also signalled a ramping up of the so-called “Pacific Solution” by opening negotiations with Indonesia for it to imprison all refugee boat arrivals and accept the immediate return of any that make it to Australia. The Indonesian government is not a signatory to the 1951 Refugee Convention and therefore has no formal legal impediment to sending asylum seekers straight back to suffer persecution in the countries they fled.

These developments, combined with the spate of deportations from Villawood, indicate that the Howard government and new immigration minister Andrews are once again ramping up the vilification and scapegoating of refugees in the lead up to a federal election.

In this, as in the infamous 2001 federal election campaign, Howard relies on the complicity of the Labor Party, which is equally wedded to the mandatory detention regime, instigated by the Hawke and Keating Labor governments in the early 1990s. Labor’s immigration spokesman Tony Burke has not uttered a word about the Villawood hunger strike.

In fact, Burke’s last media comment on the Villawood detention centre came during a January 15 press conference, during which he opposed government plans to shut down and relocate the facility. Typically, Burke sought to outdo the government’s scare campaign against asylum seekers by declaring that western Sydney residents feared a new detention centre being placed “in their backyard”.

http://www.wsws.org/articles/2007/apr2007/ref-a04.shtml

See Also:
Australian government condemns Tamil refugees to years of incarceration
[21 March 2007]

http://www.wsws.org/articles/2007/mar2007/tami-m21.shtml

Five years since Australia's SIEV X tragedy: the official cover-up continues
[19 October 2006]

http://www.wsws.org/articles/2006/oct2006/sievx-o19.shtml

Related:

Villawood detainee hospitalised after hunger strike

The Refugee Action Coalition says 35 asylum seekers have been on a hunger strike for seven days, but a spokeswoman for the department says she only knows of the involvement of eight asylum seekers.

The spokeswoman says the strike began when detainees thought a fellow asylum seeker, An Xiang Tao, was going to be deported.

She says the detainee who has been taken to hospital is being treated for dehydration and it is not known why the hunger strike is continuing.

http://www.abc.net.au/news/newsitems/200704/s1890184.htm

Hunger strike continues at Villawood

The Immigration Department says it does not know why a seven-day hunger strike at Sydney's Villawood Detention Centre is still going.

A female detainee has spent the night in hospital after involvement in the strike.

The Refugee Action Coalition says 35 asylum seekers are taking part, but a spokeswoman for the department says she only knows of eight asylum seekers.

The spokeswoman says the strike began when detainees thought a fellow asylum seeker An Xiang Tao was going to be deported.

She says the detainee who has been taken to hospital is being treated for dehydration and the Immigration Department is monitoring the hunger strike.

http://www.abc.net.au/news/newsitems/200704/s1890213.htm


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Easter Protest and visit at Villawood plus Kirribilli flyer

Kirribilli House Xmas Island

Hi, below is a notice from Motahar about the protest and visit of the detainees still on hunger strike. Attached is the leaflet for the rally at Kirribilli on Sunday (12 noon at Bradfield Park under the bridge), which i've had a couple of requests to send out again.

If the hunger strike at Villawood is still happening on the weekend, we plan to go out there on Monday from 12-2, and to announce it at Villawood.

Dear all,

As you know around 25 detainees are on hunger strike in villawood detention centre demanding unjustified and forceful deportaion. we called for a short protest a symbolic hunger strike from 12pm to 2.00pm on thursday 4th April. after 2pm we will enter to visit our detainees. RAC members will be in the protest. Please join our protest .

Hussewin, Motahar

12 noon, Bradfield Park under the north side of the harbour bridge (get off at Milsons Point station)

OVER THE past five years, Easter has become synonymous with protests for refugee rights. Woomera, Baxter and Villawood detention centres have each been the target of Easter convergences that have shone the global spotlight on the blatant disregard of human rights perpetrated by the Howard government.

The past 12 months have seen the defeat of Howard’s attempt to excise the Australian mainland from the migration zone. Some people previously demonised as “failed asylum seekers” finally got visas, but mandatory detention remains and refugees are still being deported.

Yet the construction of the $360 million, 800-bed detention centre on Christmas Island (aka Australia ’s Guantanamo) is nearing completion, unfortunately with the backing of the Labor opposition. And the recent attempt to turn back 81 Sri Lankan asylum seekers (and now send them to Nauru) shows that the government’s “fortress Australia” mindset persists.

Protesting at the doors of Kirribilli is ever more crucial given the looming election. The Howard government is in trouble on a number of fronts: the worsening debacle in Iraq ; the five year incarceration of David Hicks; the unpopularity of Workchoices; the push for uranium mining and nuclear power as a “solution” to climate change; and the incessant attacks on public education.

By uniting around these issues, we can both start pushing Howard back, and send a message to any alternative government that we need a fundamental break with the priorities of the Howard years.

Speakers already confirmed include ex-Guantanamo detainee Mamdouh Habib and from the Refugee Action Coalition and Stop the War Coalition. To get involved or to endorse the rally, call 0422078376 or 0409777173, or email mgoudkamp@yahoo.com

Endorsed by: Refugee Action Coalition, Stop the War Coalition, NSW Social Justice Network

The Refugee Action Coalition public meeting…

Christmas Island:
Australia’s very own
Guantanamo
Proposed opening: mid-2007
800 beds, $360 million
Find out about
Australia’s secretive high security prison for refugees. It’s being built now, 1000kms off the Australian mainland…Where no one can hear you scream!
Public Meeting
With Anna Samson, a refugee advocate recently on Xmas Island, plus other speakers
Monday 23 April 6pm
Level 1, Teachers Federation, 23 Mary St Surry Hills (1st left off Albion St)

Don’t think the fight for refugee rights is over. Racism, incarceration and deportation are still the defining features of Liberal policy. Leaked plans reveal the new Xmas Island detention centre will include electric fences, 24-hour surveillance, microwave detectors and individual surveillance – all intended to house people who have not been charged with any crime.
Plans also include a nursery, playground, childcare centre and classrooms- directly contravening a commitment made by Parliament that children will only be detained as an absolute last resort. The Refugee Action Coalition needs your support to expose the government’s latest ploy to de-humanise and punish those who arrive on our shores seeking peace and freedom.
ACT NOW
· Come to the public meeting and get informed
· Download the petition demanding a halt to construction of the facility at www.rac-vic.org, collect as many signatures as possible, and return to RAC by May 31.
· Join the fight for justice for refugees - the Refugee Action Coalition meets at 6pm on the 1st Monday of each month. Level 1, Teachers Federation, 23 Mary St Surry Hills (1st left off Albion St)


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