Every phone a lifeline

September 3, 2020
Issue 
Photo: Mostafa Azimitabar / Facebook

If we lived in a rational society, the media at immigration minister Alan Tudge鈥檚 to the National Press Club would have all asked: 鈥淲hat is he smoking?鈥

鈥淭here are factors today, putting strain on our [social] cohesion,鈥 Tudge claimed.

He was not talking about the big and growing rise in inequality which allows Qantas CEO Alan Joyce to receive while .

He was not talking about the rampant misogyny that means more than due to domestic violence, while a police officer can after accessing police resources to aid an abuser.

He was not talking about the racism that means Aboriginal people continue to die in custody and no one is ever convicted while .

No.

Tudge said the real strain on 鈥渟ocial cohesion鈥 is coming from 鈥渇oreign interference鈥.

鈥淔oreign actors have multiple objectives,鈥 he said. 鈥淏ut one is to seek to grow division in our society by pushing people away from Australia and placing their loyalties elsewhere.鈥

If he was seriously worried about growing divisions in society, he could start by looking in the mirror.

The Sydney Morning Herald鈥檚 take-home summary from was that 鈥渁spiring Australians will face a tougher values test amid challenges to social cohesion from the coronavirus pandemic and foreign interference鈥.

It didn鈥檛 question the government鈥檚 political line, which relies on racism and a society-wide acceptance that governments can act in a more authoritarian way in a pandemic.

Tudge wants to change the Migration Act to 鈥渟trengthen鈥 the character test and introduce a ban on 鈥減rohibited items鈥. It is undemocratic and racist because it implicitly promotes a finger-pointing attitude towards people of colour as the source of society鈥檚 problems.

Nobody will be surprised when people of colour and those from poor countries end up being the most disadvantaged.

It is in this context that the government is sharpening its racism.

There are so many reasons why allowing the minister the power to take phones away from refugees in immigration detention is a bad idea.

First, having a connection to friends and family inside the detention system and outside in the community is critical to maintaining refugees鈥 mental health. Phones are an absolutely positive contribution to maintaining 鈥渟ocial cohesion鈥.

Secondly, it is already well-known that human rights abuses are routinely perpetrated in detention centres. This is why the government has always attempted to shroud them with secrecy. It is also why they are located in remote locations 鈥 journalists and even MPs are restricted from visiting, and the detention services have been privatised, helping diminish accountability. Taking phones away from refugees will exacerbate this secrecy and will undoubtedly lead to even more human rights abuses.

Separating refugees from the broader community has been and remains one of the government鈥檚 primary goals.

Nevertheless, even after decades of racist demonisation, opinion polls regularly find that there is strong support for helping 鈥済enuine refugees鈥. in 2017, for instance, found that 鈥渁lmost three quarters (72%) of respondents think those assessed to be genuine refugees who arrive in Australia by boat should be allowed to stay in Australia鈥.

However, many of those who agree with helping 鈥済enuine refugees鈥 also believe that the government wouldn鈥檛 be locking them up if they were 鈥済enuine鈥.

Yet, the truth is that about 80% of refugees brought to Australia under the Medevac law, and currently detained, have already been found to be 鈥済enuine refugees鈥.

Their ongoing detention is therefore the government鈥檚 means of trying to break down the social cohesion between refugees and the wider community.

Refugees鈥 access to phones in detention hotel,s such as at Kangaroo Point, has been critical to their campaign for freedom, which itself has worked well to undermine the government鈥檚 demonisation of them.

Tudge also told the Press Club that he is concerned that 鈥渇oreign actors鈥 are seeking to 鈥渟ow distrust in government and institutions鈥. But as Labor and the Coalition continue to support such cruelty towards refugees and asylum seekers 鈥 undermining among other international human rights treaties 鈥 it is clear that they are achieving that all on their own.

[Alex Bainbridge is the national convenor of .]

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