Sunday, November 16, 2014

SPEECH FOR LABOR FOR REFUGEES TO BRANCHES OF THE ALP


SPEECH FOR LABOR FOR REFUGEES, SPEECH TO BRANCHES, JENNY HAINES

On the 60th Anniversary of the Signing of the Refugee Convention, on World News Radio, Dr Susan Harris-Rimmer, Director of Studies at the Australian National University's Asia-Pacific College of Diplomacy said of the Refugee Convention-

"Robert Menzies signed on to the Convention in 1954 because the memory of war -- and the aftermath of war, and the negotiations to deal with all the refugees produced by the Second World War -- was still very fresh in the Australian memory. I mean, Robert Menzies was no soft-hearted humanitarian. He wasn't necessarily an internationalist. He was pretty similar, in many ways, to the current Prime Minister, Tony Abbott, and John Howard. He was acting in Australia's national interests. Darwin had been bombed, Australians had been captured in Singapore, enemy submarines had been in Sydney Harbour. It wasn't inconceivable to Menzies that Australians might be refugees themselves. And so there was a reciprocity in signing the Convention, in the sense it might benefit Australians or our neighbours, and that sense of reciprocity is the heart of international law.”


The commitment to the Refugee Convention in 1951 was a bipartisan commitment. Doc Evatt the Labor Leader at the time had been instrumental in the establishment of the United Nations and the writing of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. He was enthusiastic about the formation of the Refugee Convention.

Paul Power from the Refugee Council of Australia reported on the 60th Anniversary of the signing of the Refugee Convention that -

“Australia was represented at the July 1951 Conference in Geneva, where they spent three-and-a-half weeks developing the various articles of the Refugee Convention, and one of the articles said that it would come into force 90 days after the sixth country ratified, or acceded to, it. And it just so happened that Australia was the sixth country."

Ahead of Australia, five European countries -- Denmark, Norway, Belgium, Luxembourg and Germany -- had signed up over the first two years.

Indeed, the original convention was very much about Europe, where the war had displaced millions of people.

Many were Jewish refugees who had escaped the Holocaust, and many were Eastern Europeans who didn't want to go back to their home countries now under Communist rule.

Mr Menzies signed into effect an International Convention that defined who was a refugee, the rights of a refugee and the legal obligations of countries signing up to the Convention.

Refugees were, it said, people outside their own countries who feared persecution because of their race, nationality, membership in a particular social group or political opinion.

Nations signing up, it said, could not expel refugees, could not return them to places where they were not safe.

The Convention, in fact, referred specifically to events occurring in Europe before 1 January 1951.” Reference Ibid.

In 1967, Australia ratified the Protocol Relating to the Status of Refugees. 146 countries ratified this Protocol. Where the United Nations 1951 Convention relating to the Status of Refugees had restricted refugee status to those whose circumstances had come about "as a result of events occurring before 1 January 1951", as well as giving States party to the Convention the option of interpreting this as "events occurring in Europe" or "events occurring in Europe or elsewhere", the 1967 Protocol removed both restrictions on time and place. Reference :http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Protocol_Relating_to_the_Status_of_Refugees

How times were different then. Or were they? There were millions of displaced people fleeing war, persecution, torture and death. There ARE millions fleeing war, persecution, torture and death now. Certainly many of those displaced then were European and many were Christian. Now refugees largely come from the Middle East, Arab Countries and South East Asia and aren’t Christian. Why does that make a difference? Australians themselves had been through the deprivations of war, whereas now Australians live in comparative luxury compared to the living conditions of refugees on the trail to find a safe haven.

In our political life bipartisanship on the issues of refugees and asylum seekers has become fraught, with the LNP Coalition seemingly determined to take the toughest line they can get away with with the electorate, and the Labor Party Federal Caucus in government and in opposition struggling to keep up.

John Howard set the pace after 9/11 with the Tampa and the fear campaign that those coming on the boats may be terrorists. What self respecting terrorist would get on a rickety boat and risk drowning? They would fly in of course! The Labor Party led by Kim Beazley was helpless and hopeless in the face of Howard’s assault on the rights of refugees. It was Beazley’s me-tooism that led John Robertson, Amanda Tattersall and Paul Howes to found Labor for Refugees.

Labor for Refugees is made up of party members and trade unionists who, in 2001, committed themselves to updating and improving Labor Party Policy on refugees and asylum seekers. At State and Federal Conferences of the party since then Labor for Refugees have worked hard. At the 2002 NSW State Conference, Labor for Refugees successfully led the push for the improvements to NSW State Party Policy on refugees and asylum seekers, combining Right and Left voters in an almost unanimous updating and improvement in party policy. NSW State Party Policy on refugees and asylum seekers was updated again in 2007. Labor for Refugees was instrumental in the improvements to National Policy at the National Conferences of the ALP in 2004, 2007, 2009 and 2011. The next National Conference of the ALP is going to be crucial in determining whether the ALP can return to a fair and humane policy on refugees and asylum seekers.

We face a crossroads in our party. In the last 2 years at least four State Conferences of the ALP have supported Labor for Refugees initiated motions. In WA, Victoria and Queensland, those resolutions were carried unanimously. In NSW there were amendments but the resolution put by Labor for Refugees was only narrowly lost. We have a divided Caucus with a number of members, Melissa Parke MP for Fremantle, Anna Burke, the former Speaker of the House, and others trying to move the Caucus to a more humane position. The Federal Labor Caucus Majority at the present is committed to offshore processing. This was the position adopted by the Gillard Government after a number of deaths at sea from 2008. The Caucus Line now could be summed up with - we have to maintain the offshore detention centres but administer them better than Scott Morrison in order to stop the boats and stop the drownings.

Labor for Refugees recently published our second book The Drownings’ Argument in which 11 prominent writers and activists for refugees explode the drownings’ argument. Ged Kearney launching this book in Geelong recently called it a “small book but mighty”. You can order a copy of this book here tonight. Julian Burnside, the prominent Melbourne QC who now campaigns for refugee and asylum seeker rights, and who has just won the Sydney Peace Prize for his efforts, says in this book,

Let’s be very clear about this: every death at sea is a tragedy. No-one wants to see refugees die in their attempt to escape persecution, but the often recited concern about refugees drowning is just hypocritical propaganda.”

“People like Abbott and Morrison express their concern about refugees who drown. They are not sincere, but it provides a vaguely respectable excuse for harsh policies. I will say this plainly: when Abbott and Morrison say they are worried about refugees drowning on their way to Australia, they are lying: they are deceiving the public. It opens the way for them to mistreat asylum seekers who have not drowned, and it helps them pursue the darker purpose of keeping refugees out.”

Reference The Drownings’ Argument, Labor for Refugees, 2014, Page 12.

But our Shadow Immigration Spokesperson Richard Marles suggested recently that the Caucus move on from that position when he said in a stunning departure from previous Federal Labor Caucus refugee policy on Sky News on Sunday 26th October 2014,

The opposition immigration spokesman gave his strongest indi¬cation yet that if Labor was ¬returned to office it might not ¬jettison the centrepiece of the -Coalition’s border protection.
Labor would need to be convinced the policy was safe and not erode the relationship with Indonesia, Mr Marles said, adding those questions had not been answered because of the “shroud of secrecy of operational security’’.
“We have no doubt at all about the impact of the turnback policy,’’ Mr Marles said. “It has had an impact and, let me be clear about it, it has to be said in combi¬nation with the regional resettlement arrangement which Labor put in place.’’
The opposition immigration spokesman gave his strongest indi¬cation yet that if Labor was ¬returned to office it might not ¬jettison the centrepiece of the -Coalition’s border protection.
Labor would need to be convinced the policy was safe and not erode the relationship with Indonesia, Mr Marles said, adding those questions had not been answered because of the “shroud of secrecy of operational security’’.
“We have no doubt at all about the impact of the turnback policy,’’ Mr Marles said. “It has had an impact and, let me be clear about it, it has to be said in combi¬nation with the regional resettlement arrangement which Labor put in place.’’
The opposition immigration spokesman gave his strongest indi¬cation yet that if Labor was ¬returned to office it might not ¬jettison the centrepiece of the -Coalition’s border protection.
Labor would need to be convinced the policy was safe and not erode the relationship with Indonesia, Mr Marles said, adding those questions had not been answered because of the “shroud of secrecy of operational security’’.
“We have no doubt at all about the impact of the turnback policy,’’ Mr Marles said. “It has had an impact and, let me be clear about it, it has to be said in combi¬nation with the regional resettlement arrangement which Labor put in place.’’
The opposition immigration spokesman gave his strongest indi¬cation yet that if Labor was ¬returned to office it might not ¬jettison the centrepiece of the -Coalition’s border protection.
Labor would need to be convinced the policy was safe and not erode the relationship with Indonesia, Mr Marles said, adding those questions had not been answered because of the “shroud of secrecy of operational security’’.
“We have no doubt at all about the impact of the turnback policy,’’ Mr Marles said. “It has had an impact and, let me be clear about it, it has to be said in combi¬nation with the regional resettlement arrangement which Labor put in place.’’
“that if Labor was ­returned to office it might not ­jettison the centrepiece of the ­Coalition’s border protection. Labor would need to be convinced the policy was safe and not erode the relationship with Indonesia”, Mr Marles said, adding those questions had not been answered because of the “shroud of secrecy of operational security. We have no doubt at all about the impact of the turnback policy,’’ Mr Marles said. “It has had an impact and, let me be clear about it, it has to be said in combi­nation with the regional resettlement arrangement which Labor put in place.’’ Reference http://www.smh.com.au/federal-politics/political-news/labor-might-turn-back-the-boats-richard-marles-20141026-11bym6.html

Uproar followed within the Federal Caucus, the ALP generally and in the community.  By the following day, Richard Marles was backing away from these comments but his defenders in the Federal Labor Caucus then called for the next National Conference of the ALP in 2015 to accept turning back the boats as party policy. Reference The Australian 28.10.14, 12.00am, Jared Owens Reporter. “Opposition moves to adopt the Abbott government’s policy of turning back asylum-seeker boats would be resisted at next year’s ALP National Conference, exposing a damaging internal rift ahead of the next election.
Labor immigration spokesman Richard Marles yesterday maintained he was “open-minded” about the border measure to deter people-smuggling from Indonesia. But he refused to commit to turnbacks, even if Labor could
be assured it was safe and did not harm relations with Jakarta.”

Good grief !!! Even Julia Gillard in 2010 said….

 “Let me say one thing loud and clear. Our nation would not leave children to drown. We are Australians and our values will never allow us to embrace this kind of evil. So inevitably, the so called strategy of turning back the boats would become a strategy of rescuing asylum seekers from the water with all the risks that that entails to the lives of defence and customs personnel. The slogan is hollow and Mr Abbott knows it.” Reference Lowy Institute Speech, 6.7.10.

In response to Richard Marles’s comments, Robin Rothfield the National Co convenor went public warning Richard Marles that he was “out of step with party members”, calling Richard’s statements about retaining the Coalitions hard line on boat turnbacks as “absolutely appalling” and “totally unacceptable.” Robin said, “He has to keep in tune with the party membership. His views are totally out of line with the party membership.”


 

Richard Marles backed down after several members of Caucus refused to  back his proposed change to their policy but there was a quote in the media from some right wing members of the Caucus for his proposal to be put to the next National Conference of the ALP.


Labor for Refugees wants the next National Conference of the ALP to be a break away from the policies that Labor has pursued over recent years. The next National Conference of the Party is a chance for Labor to make a break with the past and move towards a more humane and fair policy for refugees and asylum seekers. What we also need now is a commitment that those who will be part of a Labor Government on our behalf will accept and implement a more humane policy, and not keep allowing the LNP Coalition to set the agenda on the treatment of refugees and asylum seekers.

 

THE IMPENDING LEGISLATION

 


 

But right now, in Parliament, refugees and asylum seekers and indeed the people of Australia themselves, face an attack on their rights and libertities. Scott Morrison is seeking to bring in legislation that includes all of the measures that he has ever wanted the Migration and Maritime Powers Legislation Amendment (Resolving the Asylum Legacy Caseload) Bill 2014.

Since becoming Minister for Immigration and Border Protection, Scott Morrison has implemented an unprecedented assault on the rights of refugees and asylum seekers. He did inherit what Labor left behind, up to 35,000 unprocessed asylum seekers in on shore and offshore detention. Make no mistake, Scott Morrison wants to deport these 35,000 asylum seekers and he will tear up the rule of law in this country if he has to, to achieve that. Morrison is at war with asylum seekers but he is also at war with the Australian legal system. Refugee Advocate lawyers are fighting him tooth and nail through the courts , especially the High Court, to stop his assault on the rights of asylum seekers. So far the High Court is winning. Reference: https://twitter.com/MalcolmFraser12/status/526966215634202626/photo/1

 

But this legislation, if passed, will give Scott Morrison unprecedented powers as a Minister. This is the legislation of Scott Morrison’s wet dreams!!! If passed in its draft form, his powers will not be subject to the rulings of the High Court.


What this legislation does is
:

 

1.   Removes references to the Refugee Convention from the Migration Act.

 

2.   Suspends the rules of natural justice applying to asylum seeker applications – removing the possibility of High Court challenges.  This cannot be allowed to happen. The rule of law and the judiciary is fundamental in our democracy, ensuring fairness, justice and transparency in decision-making.

 

3.   Brings in changes that would allow boats carrying people seeking asylum to be towed anywhere beyond Australian territories, including the open sea, and leaving them there without regard for the safety of their passengers.

 

4.   Introduces a fast track assessment process with no access to the Refugee Review Tribunal (RRT) and very limited review processes.    It should be noted that fast turnaround processing was ruled illegal in the United Kingdom in July 2014 as it carried an “unacceptable risk of unfairness.” http://www.righttoremain.org.uk/blog/high-courts-dft-order-is-toothless-but-perhaps-predictable/

 

 

5.   Brings in changes that mean that children born to asylum seekers in Australia who arrived by boat, will not be eligible for any visa, but would be classified as “transitory persons”, creating a new group of stateless persons. Unfortunately the High Court has given this some validity in a recent ruling that said a child born to asylum seeker parents in an Australian or offshore facility is deemed to have been born on a boat…..what an extraordinary decision!

 

 

6.   Introduces Safe Haven Enterprise Visas, as suggested by the Palmer United Party. These would be temporary visas for 3 to 5 years which would not lead to permanent protection visas even for those people assessed to be refugees.   There is no justification for leaving people found to be refugees in limbo, with no prospect of resettlement in Australia.

 

 

There is no doubt that this legislation will get through the LNP Coalition dominated lower house but it can be stopped in the Senate. If Labor and Cross Bench Senators decide not to support the proposed changes the legislation is dead. This legislation must die in the Senate. So far Richard Marles has indicated that Labor will move amendments which they expect to be lost, and then vote against the whole Bill. This is very important. We cannot afford to give Morrison unprecedented power.

 

SO WHAT IS THE SOLUTION?  

 

Australia needs to grow up and recognise that we are part of the world and that we have international obligations as a world citizen. We are currently taking 13,500 refugees and asylum seekers a year, reduced by the current government from 20,000. Recently 250,000 refugees crossed from Syria into Turkey in a matter of days and we whinge and whine about 13,000 in a year! Sweden takes in more refugees through the UN agency UNHCR than any other European country; this year it has decided to allocate almost one-third of its quota (600 out of 1,900 resettlement places) to Syrian citizens and Palestinians from Syria. Reference: http://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/apr/29/syrian-refugees-sweden-new-life

 

Lebanon, a country with many troubles is almost at breaking point with trying to care for the refugees flooding in to that country. In October 2014 the U.N. High Commission on Refugees estimated that by December 2014, Lebanon will have taken in 1.5 million refugees. This is a considerable burden for a country with a population of only 4.5 million, leading Lebanon’s government to announce last week that they could no longer continue to accept Syrian refugees. Reference: http://www.ipsnews.net/2014/10/lebanon-at-breaking-point-over-refugees/

After a terrible number of drownings at sea, and uproar within the Italian community, the Italian Government has until recently run a program called Mare Nostrum in which they go out and collect people from asylum seekers boats and welcome them with open arms as migrants. That program has recently been modified on the distance they will go to do pick-ups due to the cost to the Italian Government, already struggling with the after effects of the GFC. Fears have been expressed that up to 3000 asylum seekers a year will lose their lives in drownings due to the ending of Mare Nostrum.



Australia needs a properly negotiated and structured regional framework in which we acknowledge our responsibilities not just dump them on countries like Cambodia which can barely afford to feed, clothe and educate its own people. We need to work with our regional neighbours towards a system of co-operation which ensures the protection – not rejection – of people seeking safety and security. And this process needs to start BEFORE people get on boats or even need to get on boats. Labor for Refugees has outlined how this could work to several Labor Ministers and our views are documented in our first book, Alternatives to Offshore Processing. You can also order a copy of this book here tonight. Ministers say to us that the Indonesians won’t co-operate. We have had people talking to the Indonesian bureaucracy and they are very interested in the idea. It can be done. There just has to be the will in government.

 

The next Labor Government needs to develop approaches to the processing of refugees and asylum seekers which are based on decency, the rule of law and which protect human rights.

Our National Platform currently says

“Labor recognises the economic and social contribution that has been made by migrants and refugees throughout our nation’s history. Labor regards Australia’s diversity as a source of national strength and a critical factor in nation-building.

 

147 Australia is and will remain a society of people drawn from a rich variety of cultural, ethnic, linguistic and religious backgrounds. Australia is and will remain a multicultural society.

148 To support Australia’s multicultural society, Labor’s migration policies will:

●● remain non-discriminatory

●● respect the heritage and traditional customs of migrants and their children

●● recognise the importance of all aspects of the migration program, including skilled, family and humanitarian streams

●● be evidence-based, supported by rigorous research and evaluation

●● support Australia’s social cohesion by encouraging universal respect for Australia’s democratic beliefs and laws, and the rights, responsibilities  and privileges of Australian citizenship

●● promote our cultural diversity and combat prejudice and discrimination

●● consistently oppose those who foster extremism, hatred, ethnic division or incitement to violence.”

We in the Labor Party, we as Labor in Government need to give effect to those words.

 

END OF SPEECH

 

 

 

 

 

 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 




 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Tuesday, April 22, 2014

NIFTY AND THE NURSES

Nifty And The Nurses

By Jenny Haines, New Matilda, 22.4.14
Neville Wran
Neville Wran
Neville Wran's reforms to the NSW health system often put him at odds with the Nurses Union, but as Premier he was always approachable, writes Jenny Haines
We were well into a two week strike by mental health nurses over the 1983 Richmond Report, and we were in the Premier's office looking for a solution. Ron Mulock, the Minister for Health, was raging at us and the mental health nurses around the table with me were smiling.
I found out many years later that Neville "Nifty" Wran was out in the corridor, saying to his aide “I hope that f*****g Ron Mulock has got this right!” If only we had known that was what he was thinking. And so typical of him to give us credit, when so many wouldn't.
My first memories of Neville Wran were from when I was still a student nurse in the early 1980s, when the Wran Government announced the Beds to the West Program. Huge numbers of beds in the inner city were to be closed to free up money to build and develop hospitals and health services in the west, south-west and north of Sydney. To do so, Wran wanted to close stately old hospitals like Crown Street and Sydney Hospital.
There was no doubt that health services in these areas needed development. They also needed doctors and nurses to move to those areas to staff the facilities. But we in the union objected to the closure of beds. Why wasn’t there government money to develop health services in the suburbs, before looking at what needed to be closed in the city.
I ran on a Nurses Reform Ticket in the 1982 NSW Nurses Association elections. The old leadership of the Nurses Association had done very little to protect its members affected by the cuts, and many were shocked when we won office. Neville was a formidable opponent. He had garnered the support of the Right and the official Left of the ALP. We were painted as selfish, and the tools of the Australian Medical Association.
Over the next five turbulent years many things changed for nurses. We had to fight for wage and career structure reform, and put in place protections for nurses affected by cuts. Then the Richmond Report arrived. The proposed community alternatives for mental health care were grossly underfunded, and had to be stopped. We opposed the decisions and strategies of the Wran Government, but Neville himself was always approachable, always someone you could talk to.
I remember being in the lift at the Randwick Club on the day that Bob Hawke took over from Bill Hayden. Nifty got in at the last minute as the doors closed. As we left the club he offered me a lift to the city. I turned him down, because I feared that I would be compromised by a private discussion. To this day I regret that decision.
Nurses in the 1980s were moving towards university education. In an attempt to pacify the raging nursing profession, in 1984 the Wran Government announced the closure of hospital based schools and the transfer of nurse education to Colleges of Advanced Education. The educators and managers were thrilled but fearing for the impact on the nursing workforce numbers, the union urged the phasing out of hospital based schools and the phasing in of university education.
Again, we met the Premier. I well remember him saying, “Beware the Ides of March...” but I wasn’t sure what he was referring to at the time. Later I understood that he was then under challenge for the leadership in his own government, and he knew the perilous position of the Nurses Reform leadership.
Nifty stayed in government until July 1986. I remember walking into the NSW State Conference where he announced his retirement. There was a stunned silence over the room. I had been out buying a coffee. He was announcing his retirement as I walked in the gallery and people in the conference were yelling “No, no!” Female compatriots of Wran were crying. Everyone was shocked. Barrie Unsworth was blessed by the factions as Wran's successor.
Rumours had been circulating for a while, after the Street Royal Commission. As Wran himself once said, “If you lay down with dogs you get up with fleas”. Nothing was proved, but he had made the decision to go.
Neville was a lawyer with a distinguished career behind him when he became Premier. He was a Labor man through and through and led the Labor Party through turbulent times. He was a reformist and a committed social democrat. The reform of the Upper House was one of his best achievements. Compared to the so called political leaders of today he was a giant among men.