The reports coming out of Manus Island right now should be enough to shock us, but they aren’t. What will it take? Barrister Julian Burnside has some ideas.
Trigger warning: This post deals with distressing content.
Reports about what is happening on Manus Island are mixed.
According to inside sources, hundreds of asylum seekers are on a hunger strike, many have sewn their lips together, and tensions are high. According to Immigration Minister Peter Dutton, security levels have been high, as a precaution, and the hunger strike and lip sewing are the result of urging by refugee advocates.
There has been little apparent public concern.
Some of the hunger strikers have said they are willing to die, and want to donate their organs to Australians. The public, in its post-Christmas torpor, was unmoved. Letters sent from Manus have been published, but this has provoked outrage only in that minority of Australians who are concerned about refugees. The public remain unmoved.
Top Comments
You make some very good points. I think the Australian government should pay to have ALL of the refugees flown back to where they came from. Once there, they can apply to immigrate to Australia through the proper channels like everyone else has to do. This will have the added benefit of the Australian Government knowing exactly who it is letting into our country which will serve to enhance our national security.... Oh and by the way, it IS illegal to enter Australia on a boat!
Even under the open borders policy of Rudd and Gillard when there was essentially no serious effort made to stop refugees coming, we never exceeded our refugee quota. What happened was that we stopped taking people from the camps in the Horn of Africa and replaced them with those who had the money to fly to Indonesia and get on a boat. These tend for obvious reasons to be middle class and educated and thus more aligned with the type of people we take under our skilled migration program. I don't really have a problem with a refugee program that self selects for education and money as long as we don't exceed our quota so I say let them in. The problem becomes what do we do when the numbers exceed the annual quota? Even the looniest refugee advocate must at some level agree with the proposition that at some level as a sovereign nation we have to control who comes in. Abbott seems to be doing his best to ensure Shorten gets a go at being PM and it will be interesting to see the ALP's refugee policy. Any suggestion of opening the borders back up will see their electoral chances dashed but there are a lot of people on Labor's left who still think Gillard and Rudd got it right.