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Showing posts with label letters to morrison. Show all posts
Showing posts with label letters to morrison. Show all posts

6.12.21

Open letter to the Prime Minister

                                                                                   

                                                         6th December 2021

Dear Mr. Morrison,

Please find enclosed an open letter, addressed to you, and signed by 616 Australians who have visited our Rural Australians for Refugees stall at local markets in recent times. The letter reads:

“We, the undersigned, are deeply concerned about the plight of the 30,000 so-called legacy caseload of refugees who for almost a decade have been trapped in the legal limbo of temporary protection visas.

Australia is the sole signatory to the UN Refugee Council with a formal system for providing refugees with indefinite temporary, rather than permanent, protection. The UNHCR has described the policy as both “punitive” and “cruel”.

Temporary protection leaves this vulnerable group in perpetual uncertainty and fear. Requiring them to relive their trauma every three or five years is both cruel and unnecessary. Prohibiting family reunion, access to student loans and other benefits makes it well-nigh impossible for these people to rebuild their lives and to finally call Australia home.

We call on the government to end this cruel policy and to finally grant these people permanent protection. It is time to show some compassion and humanity.”

This group of people, all of them refugees who have demonstrated their right to our protection, present no threat to the Australian people. To continue to assert, as your government frequently does, that the current policy setting is designed to “keep Australia safe, and save lives at sea” is both absurd and indefensible. The Australian navy and air force have ensured that no asylum seeker boats have arrived on our shores since 2014. Let us not forget that you have a trophy in the form of a boat in your office which proudly proclaims: “I stopped these.”

It is time to end the cruel policy of temporary protection, which serves no useful purpose, and which condemns so many people to a life of uncertainty and fear.

Please show some compassion for these people, and give them the permanent protection that they so desperately need, and to which they are entitled under international law.

Yours sincerely,

M....  G.........



Bellingen and Nambucca District Rural Australians for Refugees

 

                                   

18.5.21

Our local RAR Newsletter May, 2021

ROADSIDE DEMONSTRATION REPORT


Our recent roadside demonstration in Coffs Harbour was a great success. For the first time in more than a year, our ranks reached double figures, and we were delighted to welcome back a number of supporters who we hadn’t seen for a while. The response from passing motorists, who couldn’t fail to be impressed by the number of placards and banners on display, was very positive.

 

Our next demonstration will take place on Saturday 22nd May from 10.00 until 11.30 am on Waterfall Way in Bellingen. You will find us at our usual location near the Yellow Shed, opposite the entrance to the golf club. Please join us if you can, to show your support for refugees and asylum seekers.

 

BELLINGEN MARKET REPORT

We had a beautiful warm and sunny day for our market stall on Saturday, and we were kept busy by a steady stream of visitors to our stall, many of whom expressed their deep dismay about our government’s ongoing punitive treatment of refugees and asylum seekers. We collected more than 150 signatures on our new open letter to the Leader of the Opposition, and more than $160 in donations and sales, all of which will be donated to the Asylum Seekers Centre in Newtown.

 

A big thank you to the supporters who helped make the morning such a success.

 

Our next market stall will be at the Valla Beach market on Saturday 5th June from 9.00 am until 1.00 pm. If you can help out on our stall for an hour or two, then please let Mike know by emailing him at: mandm.griffin2@bigpond.com, so that he can draw up a roster. New supporters are always welcome. Helping out at our markets is not an onerous task, and newcomers are always well briefed and supported.

 

OUR NEW OPEN LETTER

 

As you will be aware, we recently posted an open letter to the Prime Minister which had been signed by more than 800 people. We now have a new letter, this time addressed to the Leader of the Opposition, Anthony Albanese. It reads:

 

Dear Mr. Albanese,

As the Labor Party reviews its policy platform in preparation for the federal election, we, the undersigned, urge the Party to adopt a principled and compassionate asylum policy which is consistent with our international obligations. At a minimum, we urge the Party to commit to:

·      Bringing all remaining refugees from Nauru and PNG to Australia for resettlement here or in other safe countries, including New Zealand.

·      Urgently reviewing and processing all outstanding asylum claims.

·      Releasing all remaining refugees and asylum seekers from APODs and other mainland detention centres, except where in individual cases there are overriding security issues.

·      Issuing all genuine refugees in Australia with Permanent Protection Visas.

A clear and principled asylum policy, articulated boldly, would attract significant community support.

 

If you would like to collect signatures from family, friends or colleagues, then please email Mike at: mandm.griffin2@bigpond.com, and he will email a copy to you. It would be good if we could collect 1,000 signatures.

 

THE FEDERAL BUDGET AND REFUGEES

The government has decided to maintain the “temporary” pandemic-related reduction in our annual humanitarian refugee intake from 18,750 to 13,750 for at least the next three years. This comes at a time when there are more than 26 million refugees worldwide, most of them fleeing conflict, political upheaval or persecution in their homelands. The great majority of them are hosted in poor and developing countries which are already struggling to care for their own people, particularly in the midst of a global pandemic. It is deeply disappointing that our government, the tenth most rich country in the world, has decided to do less for refugees when it could, and should, be doing more.

 

 The government has allocated $811 million in the budget for the continued detention of refugees and asylum seekers on Nauru and in PNG. There are currently 109 people detained on Nauru, and 130 in PNG, meaning that our government plans to spend $3.4 million next year keeping each of these 239 refugees and asylum seekers out of sight and out of mind, and demonstrating to the world that we are irresolutely tough on protecting our borders from those seeking asylum on our shores. The trauma and suffering that we have inflicted on these people over a period of almost eight years is unconscionable.

 

We must continue our campaigning until this shameful chapter in our country’s history is brought to an end.

 

REFUGEES TO BE DETAINED INDEFINITELY

Last week the government passed into law, with the support of Labor, amendments to the Migration Act which give the government the power to indefinitely detain refugees, potentially for the rest of their lives. The new law allows for the government, where it has cancelled the visa of a refugee but could not send them back to their country of origin because they would face persecution there, to detain them indefinitely. The new law also gives the minister a broad unchallengeable power to withdraw a person’s refugee status recognition – declaring they can be returned to the country from which they had fled.

 

Even the government-controlled joint parliamentary committee on human rights raised serious concerns about the law, arguing it presented a “real risk that detention may become indefinite” and “may also have implications for Australia’s obligation not to subject any person to torture or to cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment”. These concerns do not appear to have troubled either the government or the opposition.

David Burke, the legal director at the Human Rights Law Centre, said the legislation exposed the government’s willingness to leave growing numbers of refugees in detention without any plan.  He states:

 

 The government should not have the power to lock people up for potentially the rest of their lives without any safeguards. This forces refugees into an unthinkable choice between spending potentially decades in immigration detention, or agreeing to go back to a country where they will be persecuted. These new laws allow the Morrison government to warehouse people who have nowhere else to go.”

 

It should surely never be acceptable for a minister, at the stroke of a pen, to overturn the fundamental protection that the government has given, after due process, to someone whose life is at risk.

How did we get to this?

23.1.20

Bello Nambucca RAR Newsletter 21st January 2020


Roadside demonstration report

Bellingen market report

Letter to the Prime Minister

Update on Bomana prison, Port Moresby

New open letter

Roadside demonstration report
Our demonstration in Bellingen last Thursday attracted hugely positive responses both from passing motorists and from people walking by. Whilst it is understandable that, after six years, people might grow weary of feeling the need to stand regularly at the roadside to remind the public about our government’s heartless and cruel asylum policy, there are two powerful reasons for continuing with our campaign. Firstly, our government has been forced to respond to this kind of public pressure about the treatment of refugees: there are now no children detained on Nauru, and the Manus island detention centre has closed. Secondly, it is intolerable that so many refugees – including some 220 men in PNG - remain in limbo, and in poor health, after being detained since 2013. We simply have to keep up the fight for their freedom. Please consider joining us at our roadside demonstrations to help maintain the pressure.
Our upcoming demonstrations are as follows:
Thursday 30th January: Big Banana, Coffs Harbour
Thursday 13th February: Opposite the base hospital, Coffs Harbour
Thursday 27th February: Waterfall Way, Bellingen
Thursday 12th March: Big Banana, Coffs Harbour
Thursday 26th March: Opposite the base hospital, Coffs Harbour.
All the demonstrations run from 2.30 to 4.00 pm

Bellingen market report

Bellingen has received some much-needed rain in recent days, which resulted in the organisers cancelling Saturday’s market, so we have nothing to report!
Our next market stall will be at Valla Beach market on Saturday 1st February from 9.00 am until 1.00 pm. If you are able to help out for an hour or two, then please let Mike know by emailing him at: mandm.grifffin2@bigpond.com.





Letter to the Prime Minister
This week we finally sent off the open letter to the Prime Minister, signed by 575 supporters at our market stalls, calling on the government to end the practice of issuing Temporary Protection Visas (TPVs) to refugees who have been found to be in need of protection under international law. The normal practice across the world is for refugees, once their asylum claims have been investigated and validated, to be given permanent protection, so that they can rebuild their lives in a new country. The current policy, reintroduced by the Abbott government, leaves refugees in a permanent state of uncertainty and anxiety. It is driven by political rather than humanitarian considerations. You can find the letter on our blog letters page.



New open letter
We have a new open letter to the Prime Minister, which we had planned to launch at the Bellingen market, but which we will now launch at the Valla Beach market on 1st February. The focus is very much on the plight of the asylum seekers and refugees who remain in limbo in PNG, and who our government is keen for us to forget about. You can view the open letter on our blog letters page. If you would like a copy of the petition, so that you can collect signatures from family and friends, then please email Mike at: mandm.griffin2@bigpond.com. Just think, if 50 supporters each collected just 10 signatures, that would really boost our efforts!



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11.9.19

Letters to Sen Keneally, PM Morrison, Sen McKim


                                                                                        9th September 2019


Dear Senator Keneally,


Please find attached a letter sent today to the Prime Minister on behalf of Rural Australians for Refugees, relating to the offer of the New Zealand government to resettle 150 refugees from PNG and Nauru in New Zealand. As you are aware, the situation in PNG and Nauru for the remaining asylum seekers and refugees is utterly hopeless. They have languished far from our shores, without any hope for the future, for more than six years, which is a deeply shameful state of affairs.

We are pleased to note that the Labor opposition supports the New Zealand offer, and we are encouraged by the fact that you personally have taken the fight to the Minister for Home Affairs on a number of asylum seeker issues, in stark contrast to the near-monastic silence of your predecessor. What we would ask is that you, and the Labor party, redouble your efforts to force the Coalition government to seriously consider the New Zealand government’s offer to resettle these refugees. We need to bring this shameful chapter in our history to a speedy end. The suffering has gone on for far too long.

                                                                                                                                                                                   

                                                                                                                                                                                                                        Yours sincerely,



                                                                                                                                                                                                                        Mike Griffin

Bellingen and Nambucca District Rural Australians for Refugees



                                                                                               
                                                                            9th September 2019


Dear Prime Minister,


Please find enclosed an open letter, addressed to yourself, and signed by 1520 Australian citizens. Their signatures were collected in recent times at local markets and other venues around Australia by members of Rural Australians for Refugees. The letter reads:


“Almost every day we read about the ongoing suffering of the asylum seekers and refugees who continue to languish indefinitely on Manus and Nauru. We are dismayed and deeply saddened by reports of self-harm and attempted suicides by people whose spirits have been crushed by years of detention, and who can see no hope for the future. This cannot continue.


We therefore ask that you urgently enter into discussions with the New Zealand government, with a view to accepting their generous offer to resettle 150 refugees annually from Manus and Nauru. It is important to us that you demonstrate by your actions that you are prepared to treat these people with compassion and humanity.”


We lost count a long time ago of the number of visitors to our local market stalls who tell us that they feel deeply ashamed to be Australian, as they observe the gratuitous and ongoing suffering inflicted on the detainees on Nauru and in PNG. It is surely time to put this shameful chapter in our history behind us. The New Zealand government’s generous and compassionate gesture offers a positive way forward. We therefore urge you to accept this offer to resettle the refugees and to expedite the closure of all offshore detention facilities without delay.



                                                                                                                                                                                                                        Yours sincerely,



                                                                                                                                                                                                                            Mike Griffin

                                                                                                                                                                                Bellingen and Nambucca District RAR                           



                                                            
The Reply



Dear Mr Griffin 


Thank you for your correspondence of 9 September 2019 to the
Prime Minister, the Hon Scott Morrison MP, enclosing a signed open letter concerning the Australian Government’s regional processing and resettlement arrangements. Your correspondence has been referred to the Minister for Home Affairs, the
Hon Peter Dutton MP, as the matter raised falls within his portfolio responsibilities.


The Minister appreciates the time you have taken to bring these matters to his attention and has asked that I reply on his behalf.

As a party to the 1951 Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees and its 1967 Protocol (the Refugee Convention), Australia takes its international obligations seriously. Australia is committed to providing protection to refugees consistent with the obligations set out in the Refugee Convention and other relevant international treaties to which Australia is a party. 

The Government works closely with the Governments of Papua New Guinea (PNG) and Nauru to ensure transferees continue to be provided with a range of health, welfare and support services, including extensive physical and mental healthcare provisions, free accommodation and utilities, allowances and employment services. Where specialist medical treatment is not available in PNG or Nauru, mechanisms are in place for temporary transfers to a third country for treatment, including Australia. 

People under regional processing arrangements are treated with respect and dignity and in accordance with international human rights standards. Their protection claims are assessed by the Governments of PNG and Nauru and are undertaken in accordance with each countries respective laws and processes. 

Under regional processing arrangements, refugees have permanent resettlement options and are being resettled. People found to be refugees by the Government of PNG can settle in PNG, express an interest in US resettlement, seek assisted voluntary return or move to a country they have the right to reside in. 

People found to be refugees by the Government of Nauru can stay in Nauru for 20 years, express an interest in US resettlement, apply for an assisted voluntary return package or move to a country they have the right to reside in.




Australia appreciates the offer from the New Zealand Government to resettle refugees, however we are focused on completing the larger arrangement with the United States (US). Australia’s border protection policies have removed the incentive for people to join dangerous and illegal people smuggling ventures to Australia. The Government remains mindful of not undoing efforts to combat people smuggling. 

A total of 4,183 illegal maritime arrivals were transferred to offshore processing under the previous government. Today, there are no refugees in detention under offshore processing and as at 30 September 2019, 632 refugees have been resettled under the Government’s resettlement arrangement with the US. 

Regional processing is a key pillar of Operation Sovereign Borders and supports the Government’s strong border protection policies. These policies have successfully stemmed the flow of illegal maritime ventures to Australia, disrupted people smuggling activities in the region and prevented loss of life at sea. 

The success of Australia’s border protection policies has also enabled the Government to make a generous contribution to addressing the global humanitarian crisis and increase our Humanitarian Programme annual quota to 18,750 places, this represents the largest ongoing program in over 30 years. 

Thank you for bringing your concerns to the Government’s attention. Yours sincerely 

Director
Regional Processing and Resettlement 4 October 2019


4 National Circuit Barton ACT 2600
PO Box 25 Belconnen ACT 2616 • Telephone: 02 6264 1111 • www.homeaffairs.gov.au

                                 
                                                                           9th September 2019


Dear Senator McKim,


Please find attached a letter sent today to the Prime Minister on behalf of Rural Australians for Refugees, relating to the offer of the New Zealand government to resettle 150 refugees from PNG and Nauru in New Zealand. As you are aware, the situation in PNG and Nauru for the remaining asylum seekers and refugees is utterly hopeless. They have languished far from our shores, without any hope for the future, for more than six years, which is a deeply shameful state of affairs.


We are very aware of the Greens’ principled and well-articulated policy position on the government’s asylum policy, and your personal commitment to ending offshore detention is greatly appreciated. What we would ask is that you seek to engage constructively with the Labor opposition to force the Coalition government to seriously consider the New Zealand government’s offer to resettle these refugees. We need to bring this shameful chapter in our history to a speedy end. The suffering has gone on for far too long.


We are grateful for your ongoing support.



                                                                                                                                                                                   

                                                                                                                                                                                                                        Yours sincerely,



                                                                                                                                                                                                                        Mike Griffin

Bellingen and Nambucca District Rural Australians for Refugees

                                                                                                           



                       



                                                                                                           



                       

2.7.14

Letter to Minister Morrison - Christian viewpoint on 50/50 chance of persecution 26 June 2014


From: Barbera 
Sent: Thursday, June 26, 2014 10:28 PM
Subject: Refugees 50/50 chance.

Dear Minister Morrison,
I never write to Ministers, but upon watching your speech to refugees in detention centres I believe that as a Christian I must speak up.
I hasten to say that I have no objection to you sending back people who hail from countries at peace and have legal avenues of entry, but I strongly oppose  the return of people to their countries of origin, if these countries are known to be dangerous and are actively persecuting their people because of religion or ethnicity.
I am especially appalled at your proposed legislation that if people face a 50/50 chance of being executed they may be send back
Who will be the judge of this risk............... not you personally ......................but some twenty something year old government employee who has spent his or her whole life in the comfort of middle class Australia.
A 50/50 chance of persecution ...............................is a life hanging by a thread.  
I should know as I survived the Nazi Regime.
Your proposal is not a service to Australia, we are not in a war situation when lives sometimes must be sacrified, but this is purely  a breach of morality.
As a fellow Christian I implore you to exercise your Christian conscience and show mercy to these troubled souls. 
Yours in Christian Fellowship,

17.4.14

letter to Scot Morrison Children in Detention 15 April 2014


Valla Beach
 NSW 2448
                                                                                                
                                                                                                15th April 2014

Dear Scott Morrison,
I am writing to you to express my deep concern about the ongoing detention of children  on mainland Australia, on Christmas Island and on Nauru. As an Australian citizen, I feel deeply ashamed that my government continues to flout international law for narrow political and ideological purposes. You know as well as I do that, under international law, children should not be held in detention for any longer than is absolutely necessary for health and security checks to be carried out.
As an ex-high school principal, I have a good understanding of the need for young people to live in a safe and secure environment, to feel that they are being well cared for and to have access to full-time, good quality education. You are providing none of these, and it is clear from your regular statements to the media that it is your government's clear intention to continue the current inhumane, immoral and unlawful policy.
How can you, in all conscience, despatch 177 children, many of them unaccompanied, to Nauru, where there is scant provision for their education and welfare? How do you reconcile this with the comments that you made in your maiden speech to Parliament? What has happened to the "values of loving kindness, justice and righteousness" and your commitment "to act with compassion and kindness, acknowledging our common humanity and to consider the welfare of others"? If your words to Parliament were sincere, then where is the urgent action to release all these children from detention and to provide them with a caring, supportive environment in which they can grow and learn? Without serious and urgent action, your eloquent words in Parliament in 2008 can only be regarded as self-serving and deeply hypocritical.
I look forward to learning about serious action on your part to release the 1,100 children currently held in detention without further delay.

                                                                                                Yours sincerely,

                                                                                                 Mike G