Refugee rights rally demands Labor ends cruel temporary visas

July 24, 2023
Issue 
Protest for refugee rights. Photo: Chloe DS

Hundreds of protesters gathered outside of State Library Victoria on July 22聽to demand permanent visas for refugees.

The rally was part of a national action to mark 10 years since former Prime Minister Kevin Rudd said: 鈥淎s of today, asylum seekers who come here by boat without a visa will never be settled in Australia.鈥

Since then, refugees have suffered the consequences of this inhumane policy: after being forced to flee their homelands, they have been forced into detention and then forced to live in limbo on temporary visas.

鈥淚 was born as a refugee; I grew up as a refugee; I don鈥檛 want to die a refugee,鈥 Prashanth Kumarvel told the protest. Kumarvel, a nurse, who is on a bridging visa, came to Australia by boat in hopes of 鈥渁 better life 鈥 and a better future鈥. 鈥淲hen will we have 鈥 peace? When will we have a country to call home?鈥

Victorian Greens Senator Janet Rice criticised Labor which 鈥渟aid people were going to be moved off temporary visas. A year later, it hasn鈥檛 happened鈥. Rice called for a Royal Commission into onshore and offshore detention to 鈥渦npack this dark, brutal history in Australia鈥 and put an end to it.

Reeta Arulruban, the mother of Dixtan, a refugee who was detained in Melbourne Immigration Transit Accommodation聽(MITA) and has been threatened with deportation, expressed solidarity to other refugees. 鈥淲e are all here because we need permanent protection; I am here for all the refugees left behind; I am also here for my son.鈥

Farhad Bandesh, artist, musician and refugee, who was held for six years on Manus Island, then in the Mantra hotel-prison and MITA, said: 鈥淲e are not criminals. We are people. We are innocent. We are like other people.

鈥淚 believe the Australian people 鈥 don鈥檛 want this policy. They don鈥檛 want this history. This is a dark history, for all Australian[s]; I am one of them 鈥 I am paying tax 鈥 to kill people in detention. I hate that.鈥

Refugee Action Collective Victoria聽(RAC) activist Lieke聽Janssen talked about Operation Sovereign Borders and the government鈥檚 鈥渄amaging鈥 language which it uses to perpetuate the myth that refugees are 鈥渄angerous鈥. 鈥淭here is no danger that鈥檚 coming to our borders. There are people who escaped danger 鈥 who need protection from danger.鈥

Activists brought attention to the 14,000 refugees stuck in Indonesia. One told 麻豆传媒: 鈥淲e can鈥檛 forget about the fact that one of the largest detention camps in Indonesia is currently being funded by the Australian government.鈥

聽organised the protest which was endorsed by the Greens, Amnesty International and Iranian Women鈥檚 Association among others.

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