Hobart City Council calls for release of Park Hotel refugees

February 14, 2022
Issue 
Craig Foster protests the indefinite detention of refugees in the Park Hotel prison. Photo: Craig Foster / Facebook

TheĀ Hobart City CouncilĀ wants theĀ 30 refugees being held indefinitely in the ParkĀ Hotel inĀ MelbourneĀ to be freed. AĀ successful Ā on January 31 authorisedĀ Lord Mayor Anna Reynolds toĀ request federal and state governments resettle theĀ refugees in Hobart.Ā 

The City is part of a network of .

Councillor Damon Thomas told the meeting it was a ā€œā€ that Australiaā€™s immigration policies allowed the arbitrary detention of refugees. ā€œWe as a nation should hang our heads in shame. Many of them have done moreĀ [time]Ā than a prison will put you in for murder."

Liberal PartyĀ CouncillorsĀ William CoatsĀ and Simon BehrakisĀ voted against the motion, saying the resettlement of refugees in Hobart would be ā€œā€.

Lord Mayor dismissed this. ā€œTo basically say we canā€™t [resettle the refugees in Hobart] because we canā€™t accommodate 30 people is a bit like saying we canā€™t accept any migrants or any internal migration into Hobart.ā€

The motion shows local governments can play a leadershipĀ role in promoting humane polices for refugees.

Refugee activist withĀ Ā Niko Leka toldĀ Ā鶹“«Ć½Ā that the Hobart declaration isĀ significant because ā€œit represents the view of a communityā€Ā rather than a political party.

Local councils have a history of taking action:Ā Bega Valley Shire CouncilĀ became a Welcome Town for RefugeesĀ in 2002Ā andĀ NewcastleĀ became aĀ Ā inĀ the same year.Ā Leka saidĀ this developed into a movement andĀ many regional centres like Newcastle haveĀ recentlyĀ ā€œĀ themselves asĀ WelcomeĀ TownsĀ or RefugeeĀ WelcomeĀ Zonesā€.

²Ń“Ē°ł±šĢż³Ł³ó²¹²ŌĢżĀ calling onĀ theĀ then Attorney-General George Brandis to dropĀ proposedĀ changes to sectionĀ 18C of the Racial Discrimination Act.Ā The changesĀ would have watered down the Act, legitimating racial abuse.

RegionalĀ communitiesĀ have been important advocates for refugeeĀ rights. InĀ Biloela,Ā for example,Ā locals haveĀ fought hard to get theĀ Murugappan refugee family back home and be given permanent protection.

When local communities speak up for refugees, racism is broken down,Ā Leka said, adding, it isĀ always worth approaching councils to take a stand on human rights.

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