The ASRC turned 6 on Friday the 8th of June. It humbles me to see what an extraordinary place that it has become and also saddens me that we are still needed 6 years later. We had a lovely huge party for asylum seekers and volunteers to celebrate the occasion.
I just want to say thank you to all the friends of the ASRC for their unflinching loyalty and terrific support over the last 6 years, we would not still be standing if not for your compassion, solidarity and committment.

The agreement between Australia and the US to swap genuine refugees with each other represents a new lowpoint in Australia’s treatment of asylum seekers. 

It signifies our governments contempt for the Refugee Convention and our failure to abide by the spirit and intent of the Refugee Convention. It shows both our countries governments simply continuing to use asylum seekers as political pawns for their own self interest. 

This is ballot box politics at their worst, each country thumping its chest proclaiming they are tough on refugees and border control and all it shows is what heartless and inhumane governments we have and far we have lost our way when it comes to human rights in our countries.

Whats that old saying? A measure of a society is how it treats it most vulnerable people, if this is still so then our governments should be ashamed of themselves for betraying the very fabric of our democracies.

We are appalled at John Howard’s assertion that ‘HIV-positive people should be denied entry to Australia as migrants and refugees’ (The Age, April 13).

  

It does not make sense to have a refugee program and exclude people with HIV. How can Australia have a ‘Women at Risk’ program, welcoming single women and mothers from refugee camps, many who have been sexually abused, and turn away women with HIV? Sexual assault is a weapon of war, and in many countries experiencing conflict people become infected through rape, often in refugee camps, in Africa, at the Thai Burma border, or in countries receiving Iraqi and Afghani people fleeing the conflicts in their regions. How can we deny them refugee status? Being a refugee is about the strength of one’s refugee claim, not about one’s health. How can we stigmatise people even more than we already do?

  

Two months ago, Pauline Hanson attempted a political comeback suggesting that South Africans with HIV were allowed into Australia and infecting our population. It is interesting to see how little time it has taken for this ludicrous allegation to be embraced by the Federal government.

The Asylum Seeker Resource Centre has finally found a new home to move to (our current building is being demolished to build townhouses!).  Its just 100 metres from where we are now and it’s the biggest and best building we have ever had.  A great chance to make it the best centre possible for people seeking asylum.  We will be having an official launch on the 24th of June 2007, more details coming soon.

ASRC ACHIEVES MORE SUCCESSES FOR 20 ASYLUM SEEKERS!
We have had lots of great successes in last couple of weeks.  We obtained a permanent visa for a chinese woman who faced certain tortued and imprisonment if returned to her country, a permanent visa for a burmese doctor who also faced torture and imprisonment due to his pro democracy work in his country, a permanent visa for a young ethiopian man who would have been imprisoned and possibly killed if returned.
We had the minister allow a man who has been in detention for years to apply again for asylum again, we had been able to get the minister to allow a sri lankan couple who has been for 9 years trying to gain asylum to be able to apply onshore for a parent visa giving them a grant chance of remaining in Australia and been successful in gaining a young man married to an australian with a baby the right to apply onshore for a spouse visa!
We are also close to gaining permanent visas through the ministerial stage for another sri lankan woman, an iranian family; and a disabled vietnamese man and an iranian man all of who face great danger in their countries with compelling humanitarian cases.

The ASRC Health Service recently donated some of our excess syringes, bandages, needles, etc to a board member of the Banyule CHC (Abdul Ahmed) who is setting/building up a hospital in remote Ethiopia with the Ethiopian ministry of health, he is an inspiring refugee from Ethiopia who has been working on this project for a year, It was nice to give something to others who are need when we recieve so much from generous people each and every day.

Friday the 18th of May (note new date) we will from 6pm be sleeping outside the Department of Immigration for the night to raise awareness about the destitute plight of asylum seekers. This is the first sleepout ever held for asylum seekers in Australia! 
Click on flyer below (also available on home page of website) for more details and a sponsor form to get people to sponsor you for the night to raise funds for our aid work.

The ASRC has 4 paid positions going, have a look and see if any match your background/skills and if so and you are interested, i warmly encourage you to apply.
Applications for all positions close Tuesday 1st of May 2007. 

Click on jobs below for position description and selection criteria.

Solicitor (Human Rights Law Program) Counsellor/Advocate (Counselling Program) Duty Caseworker (Casework Program) Small Business Mentoring Program Co – ordinator (Employment Program)

2007 marks the 10th anniversary of our federal government denying thousands of asylum seekers the right to work, income and health care.  By doing so they force asylum seeker families into a life of destitution, hunger, homelessness, ill health and despair.  The ASRC is making 2007 the year that we fight to get the government to end destitution for asylum seekers by ending Bridging Visa E’s and guaranteeing all people seeking asylum a fair go. It’s immoral to force people seeking asylum in Australia to become homeless and live in poverty.

  

On Friday night the 11th of May 2007 we are seeking as many people as possible to join us in sleeping outside the Department of Immigration and Citizenship (in the city) for the night to raise awareness about the desperate plight of asylum seekers to the public, politicians and the media and pressure our government to end poverty for asylum seekers which it can do with a strike of a pen by ending our unjust laws. 

  

Much more information coming soon about this sleepout on our website, including how to register to join us for the night and how you can get people to sponsor you to raise funds to help the ASRC care for asylum seekers living in poverty. 

  

Click below to watch an amazing animated short film by the UK refugee council that captures the tragic situation facing asylum seekers in our communities. 

  

Hear the stories of refugees  

  

“Any decision by the Immigration department to over-rule medical and legal opinion and return 2 mentally ill men to detention in the Port Augusta Housing Project places their lives at risk”, says Pamela Curr of the Asylum Seeker Resource Centre (ASRC).

“Last week a frail, sick woman was found unconscious and barely breathing in the same place of detention”.

Initial concerns were that she had taken an overdose however it was later confirmed that she had taken no food or water for 10 days. Severe dehydration and malnutrition were the cause of her collapse. Since August last year advocates calls for care for this desperately depressed and frightened woman have been ignored by the department. “Guards have no training in the care of sick people and no one noticed that she was not eating or drinking”,  Curr continues, “Surely this is proof that sick people are not safe in detention”.

“Sadly the department is returning to the bad old days before Cornelia Rau when  mentally ill detainees were shackled in a suicide belt with cuffed ankles and a helmet and placed in isolation cells in the Management unit”, says Curr.  “Instead of shackles they are placing two guards to stand over the men 24 hours a day” This may prevent suicide but it is not a therapeutic environment and will not enable them to recover.”

“The care of sick detainees is of rising concern as the department is ignoring treating doctor’s advice and moving these patients back into the same toxic environment which made them sick in the first place. It took several court cases before detainees were given the sort of medical care which Australians have as a right”. says Curr. “Some detainees have been shuffled in up to 3 hospitals in different states as the department seeks the medical opinion they desire”.

“ We ask the department that they be guided by both the doctors and patient guardians and allow these 2 men to be treated with dignity and respect and consent to their  recovery in a therapeutic environment – not locked up in detention,” says Curr.

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