Oppose Laborā€™s me-too racist response to court decision on indefinite detention

November 30, 2023
Issue 
Solidarity is strength. Photo: Zebedee Parkes

Laborā€™s reaction to the November 8 High CourtĀ rulingĀ that indefinite detention is unlawful,Ā underscores itsĀ continuing racist scapegoating of refugees.

°Õ³ó±šĢżHigh Court foundĀ thatĀ indefinite immigration detention constitutes punishment. The government was then obliged to release more than 100 people ā€” someĀ convicted for minorĀ offences andĀ othersĀ withoutĀ convictions in Australia, butĀ detainedĀ on ā€œcharacterā€ grounds.

Some had already been released from prison andĀ then re-detained in immigration detention ā€”Ā often forĀ longer.

Five detainees who would have been affected by the High Court decision had already been released into community detention under the Coalition governmentĀ and Labor had already released another 16.

°Õ³ó±šĢżĀ said the system of mandatory and indefinite detention had ā€œaffected the lives of tens of thousands of people, most of whom came to this country seeking protection as refugeesā€.Ā At the end of August, 1056 people were in immigration detention, 124 of whom had been detained for more than five years.

The courtā€™s decisionĀ vindicated the campaignĀ against indefinite detention, arguing it is a form of torture,Ā leading to lasting damage.

The court decision should set a precedent for all refugees in indefinite detention to be released.

The reasoning behind theĀ , which overturned a 2004 ruling,Ā isĀ that individuals cannot be punished without reason.

Prior to this, detainees who were stateless refugees, or from countries with the death penalty, were often assessed as being of ā€œbad characterā€.Ā WhenĀ they could not be deported, they were detained indefinitely.

WhenĀ it wasĀ in opposition, LaborĀ promisedĀ a more humane approach, but itĀ is now fast-tracking a new system of preventative detentionĀ to allow courts toĀ re-detain some of those who have just been released.

Labor has allowed itself to be wedged by Opposition leader Peter Dutton, who claims the newly-released detainees are ā€œall criminalsā€.

Duttonā€™s fear mongering and racism has had its desired effect. Home affairs ministerĀ Clare Oā€™Neil said: ā€œIf it were up to me, all of these people would still be in detentionā€. She aims to get new laws through parliament over the next week, saying parliament would sit until they are passed.

Oā€™Neil rushed to capitalise on the judgesā€™ reasoning, released on November 27, which include that an ā€œunacceptable risk of reoffendingā€ might allow continuing ā€œdetention ...Ā on some other applicable statutory basisā€.

The new regime would deny those released the right to workĀ and impose ankle bracelets, curfews and bail-like reporting conditions.Ā Non-compliance would trigger a immigration detentionĀ sentence of 1ā€“5 years.

AnĀ Afghan refugee has launched a Ā over laws that require him to wear an ankle bracelet and follow a curfew.

The new billĀ would limit ministerial discretion on varying detention and visas among offenders.

°Õ³ó±šĢż30-year racist bipartisanship on refugees includedĀ boat turn-backs, offshore detention and refusal to settle refugees who eventually made it to Australia.

Ā that a March 2020 report to the Home Affairs Department had warned that detention was ā€œfailingā€ and options to reduce reliance on detention had ā€œnot progressedā€.

Long-term immigration detention is damagingĀ detaineesā€™ mental health, said the report, whichĀ wasĀ sent to minister Dutton, the now sacked home affairs secretary Michael Pezzullo and Australian Border Force commissioner Michael Outram.

°Õ³ó±šĢżā€œprison cultureā€ and ā€œhardenedā€ infrastructure at some detention centres was ā€œcontrary to the governmentā€™s duty of care for other detainees who have no criminal background or prison experienceā€, it added.

The bipartisan cruelty was on full display when Labor invited Dutton to propose amendments.Ā ThisĀ is where the billā€™s four new harsh and discriminatory measures have come from.

Ā has long campaigned forĀ governments to commit to the 1951 Refugee Convention and 1967 Protocol on the Status of Refugees and honour other United NationsĀ Refugee Agency international treaty obligations.

The only way of ending the racist bipartisanship towards refugees is to build a politically independent movement that is strong enough to force the changes.

The starting point is to speak out against the proposed new laws and to campaign for permanent settlement of refugees impacted by offshore detention (the so-called Fast Track system), to allow those living in Indonesia to resettle here and to allow Afghans emergency visas.

[Jonathan Strauss is a long-time refugee rights activist and a member of theĀ .]

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