Australia must be a good global citizen towards refugees who transit Indonesia
Anita Roberts
The ten men staring through the bars at me
ask me questions I cannot answer. 'Why are we here? What have we done
that so hurts the Indonesian government? Why does Australia do
nothing?' Mr Daud, an Afghani asylum seeker, also doubts the UN: 'The
United Nations is the whole world, they must accept us, they need all
people, the poor and those from war.' Like his fellow asylum seekers in
detention in Denpasar, Daud has taken too many risks to consider the
possibility that he will not be granted refugee status.
Daud, 'the Commander', fought with the
United Front against the Taliban. When the Taliban captured and killed
his brother, also a United Front commander, he put his wife and six
children into hiding and fled. He has been in detention in Bali since
he was arrested there on 14 June 2000 for overstaying his tourist visa.
He has not yet been able to contact his family.
An officer from the United Nations High
Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) interviewed the asylum seekers in
mid-July. Five months later, they have heard nothing, and hopes are
sinking. Time stretches endlessly. The treatment of Daud's group is
inconsistent with the UNHCR's own guideline advocating a 'rapid,
flexible and liberal' process of status determination. Nor has the
Indonesian Immigration Office in Denpasar, responsible for the
'quarantined' group, been kept informed.
The Immigration Department, meanwhile,
lacks the funds to put Mr Daud on trial for breaking immigration law,
so it treats his overstay as a procedural offence and is holding him in
immigration detention. Officials hope the UNHCR will take him off their
hands as a refugee. They are confused with the lack of policy
guidelines to direct their response not only to the asylum seekers but
also the various international bodies which also claim a role, the
UNHCR and international organisation for migration (IOM).
If Daud does not get refugee status, he
will in theory be blacklisted and deported from Indonesia. This would
mean waiting in detention until either Indonesia has the funds to
deport him or his home embassy agrees to pay. The latter is unlikely,
and in any case, Daud would refuse to be repatriated. Immigration
sources acknowledge that people in this situation have been detained
for over forty years in the Kalideres detention centre in Jakarta. Over
five hundred asylum seekers like Mr Daud are now stuck in Indonesian
detention centres.
Indonesia's 'selective policy' on
immigration means it does not accept the principle of naturalisation,
nor does it permit itself to become a processing centre for refugees.
However, while not party to the Refugee Convention, Indonesia has
chosen not to remain blind to the global issue of asylum and refugees.
The Department of Foreign Affairs and that of Justice and Human Rights
both speak of a new 'humanitarian approach' to the refugee issue, which
is in fact at odds with domestic law. This stance has allowed UNHCR and
the IOM to become involved in the refugee determination process as
representatives of the international community. Thus Mr Daud's future
is determined by several often incompatible bodies - the Indonesian and
Australian governments, and these international agencies.
The two governments each effectively have
isolationist policies. Indeed, Indonesia is operating in a legal and
policy vacuum regarding the current flow of Middle Eastern asylum
seekers. There is no issue-specific memorandum of understanding on it
between them. The Indonesian Department of Foreign Affairs argues that
a framework for a MoU should be taken from the UN Convention on
Transnational Organised Crime, held in December 2000. While this MoU
remains unrealised, cooperation is largely informal and carefully
understated.
Persecution
Since the beginning of 1999, Indonesia has
become the key staging point for the movement of people from the Middle
East to Australia. Eighty five percent of those illegally entering
Australia come by boat via Indonesia. Most asylum seekers enter
Indonesia legally and try to reach either Christmas Island or Ashmore
Reef. An asylum seeker is a person who applies to a national government
for recognition as a refugee, and for permission to stay because they
face persecution on the grounds of race, religion, political opinion,
nationality or because they belong to a particular social group.
However, asylum seekers in Indonesia do not
have their applications considered by the Indonesian government, as
Indonesia has not yet signed the UN Convention relating to the Status
of Refugees 1951 (the Refugee Convention) and its 1967 Protocol.
Instead, the UNHCR branch in Jakarta considers their applications. If
successful, they will await resettlement in a third country.
More than five hundred more illegal
immigrants are feared to have died en route to Australia in 1999 alone.
Yet, Indonesia and Australia both ignore this tragedy. Commenting on a
report in December 2000 that 163 illegal immigrants had probably
drowned while sailing to Ashmore Reef, Australia, Australia's
Immigration Minister Mr Ruddock said: 'The incident appeared to have
happened outside the area of responsibility'. What a contrast to the
enthusiasm (and the money - an estimated A$2 million) the Australian
Maritime Safety Authority exhibited to save Isabelle Autissier, the
solo yachtswoman in 1995, and Tony Bullimore in 1997! Australia knows
Indonesia does not have the capability to mount a 'coastwatch' service.
Australia cannot hide behind its national boundaries.
Each year illegal people trafficking moves
an estimated four million people worldwide, and generates proceeds of
US$10 billion. Daud paid US$3,000 to an agent in Karachi, Pakistan,
whom he met through an agent in Kabul, Afghanistan. For this fee he
obtained an Afghanistan passport, Indonesian visa, and travel to
Indonesia. In Indonesia, he contacted agents in Bali and Jakarta, and
paid another US$2,000 in his attempts before arrest. Most of the asylum
seekers I spoke to indicated they would try to reach Australia, even if
it meant using up all their savings on up to three attempts. Indonesian
police and immigration officials at remote ports, who lack the means to
look after a sudden influx of foreigners, can sometimes be bribed just
to let them leave. Their last resort was to contact the UNHCR and
submit to status determination.
Peace
Australia attracts asylum seekers because
of its wealth, peace, and stability. Mr Daud says: 'If our life is not
in danger, why leave our children, our wife? I do not want to see
Indonesia or Australia, I come here for safety.' The current flow is
different only because they enter illegally. Does this make them
criminals?
A recent letter to the editor in the Sydney
Morning Herald stated 'illegals can nowadays not only drift in at will
anywhere along our coastline but also demand the right to this and
that'. Mr Ruddock himself claims illegal migration costs the Australian
taxpayer millions of dollars in coastal surveillance, detention,
litigation and removal costs. It is this perception that must be
challenged. Firstly, from the 6,808 overstayers found in Australia in
1999, only 920 arrived as asylum seekers by boat. A media beatup.
Secondly, the majority of those arriving by boat tend to apply to
remain permanently in Australia as a refugee and as such contact
Australian immigration. If any deception is involved it will be
discovered when processing the claim for refugee status.
Asylum seekers rely on their own initiative
and savings to reach safety. They face great dangers for a second
opportunity at life. They use the established channels available to
them - that is, narcotic and weapons networks. Restricted opportunity
for legal migration has forced their hand. For those fleeing
persecution, being smuggled is a reasonable alternative to
bureaucratic, time consuming and therefore life endangering legal
migration.
Each party is merely concerned with
re-directing the flow away from their respective boundaries. There is
no real recognition that this flow is due to migration issues such as
reduced opportunity for legal migration combined with labour pressures,
economic hardship, civil unrest, and persecution. The need is not for
criminal but for migration solutions. The IOM does talk of resettlement
and voluntary repatriation, but its counter-trafficking project gets
substantial funding from Australia, so it has to concern itself with
Australian views. It is senseless for individual states to act
independently in the face of this global concern. Asylum seekers cannot
call upon their homelands for protection. We cannot allow their plight
to be viewed within the framework of individual nation states'
interests.
For Australia, the 'boat people' are a hot
topic, but they only become one at the moment they arrive in Australia
and start affecting Australians. Those who make it that far are the
lucky few. We should take a hard look at the asylum seeker situation
before reaching Australian shores.
The global refugee flow is having an impact
on our region. Australia should translate its global human rights
rhetoric into regional action. This would ensure regional cohesion and
security. People trafficking and smuggling networks should be
destroyed. But criminal solutions should not be used to answer what is
essentially a migration issue. Legal migration avenues should be
improved. Australian obligations regarding the Refugee Convention
should be fulfilled in the Australian spirit. Australia should also not
be afraid to use its offshore humanitarian program to assist regional
humanitarian migration issues such as the current flow. Regional
benefits mean Australian benefits.
Only when nation states recognise that
their global obligations transcend borders will people like Mr Daud
know that their future is not arbitrarily determined by a political
game of 'national interests'.
Anita Roberts (neetalr@yahoo.com)
is a law student at the Australian National University, Canberra. She
wrote a longer report on this topic while a participant in Acicis, the
Australian Consortium for In-Country Indonesian Studies (wwwsshe.murdoch.edu.au/acicis/).
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