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refugees

The way in which refugees are excluded is one of the most serious human rights issues facing non-citizens. Refugees may find themselves denied a wide range of human rights including such basic rights as freedom, the right to work, the right to education and the right to safety. Thousands of asylum seekers have lost their lives seeking to cross international borders.

The borders of virtue and power

By
September 24, 2011
Between Virtue and Power

Closing borders: to refugees, to undocumented migrants, raises questions of virtue and questions of power. The public debate around borders is so fractured, so superficial, so bedevilled with assumption and ritual conflict that it conveys little new meaning.  It simply reiterates the existence of a continuing contest – a contest that often is more about power than rights. In this...
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Three reasons for Abandoning Mandatory Detention

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July 9, 2011
gate at Christmas Island Detention Centre

A paper delivered at a roundtable on alternatives to detention held in Canberra, June 9 – 10, 2011 By Penelope Mathew Freilich Foundation Professor The Australian National University Why does mandatory detention of asylum seekers continue in Australia when there are alternatives? In this short presentation, I invite people to think about three important...
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Do Foreigners Have the Same Human Rights as the Rest of Us?

By
July 6, 2011
Same Human Rights?

At the core of human rights is the axiomatic truth that human beings have inherent rights: that all human beings are equal and possessed of dignity and that violation of such rights is both morally offensive and legally impermissible. An alternative ordering of human relationships is mandated by exclusive national citizenship. Implicitly and explicitly...
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UN High Commissioner for Human Rights in Australia

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May 25, 2011
Navi Pillay UN High Commissioner for Human Rights

As, UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, Navi Pillay, today acknowledged there are a lot of human rights positives for Australia, but there were two issues on which Australia’s record is troubled: Australia’s treatment of indigenous Australians and asylum seekers. “In my discussions with Aboriginal people, I could sense the deep hurt and pain that...
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Why Global Citizenship?

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April 3, 2011
passport

1. Introduction Plutarch said: … nature has given us no country as it has given us no house or field. … Socrates expressed it … when he said, he was not an Athenian or a Greek, but a citizen of the world (just as a man calls himself a citizen of Rhodes or Corinth)....
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Latest Deaths in Detention: Mohammed Asif Atay and Meqdad Hussein

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March 29, 2011
sweet pea

Mohammed Asif Atay and Meqdad Hussein are the latest asylum seekers to die in Australian migration detention centres.  Both were young men.  Mohammed was aged 19.  Meqdad was aged 20.  Both were Hazara asylum seekers from Afghanistan.  Both committed suicide.  Mohammed had been detained for 10 months in the Curtin detention centre in South Australia.  He had...
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More than one thousand deaths since 2000

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December 28, 2010
More than one thousand deaths since 2000

On 15 December 2010, 50 people are believed to have drowned when their asylum seeker boat was smashed, only metres from safety, on the shores of Christmas Island.  Some of the bodies of those who died will never be recovered.  In protests by asylum seekers that followed, children held in detention are seen holding up placards asking: “The children died....
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Government should take lesson from Christmas Islanders

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December 21, 2010
Christmas Island

It appears from all reporting that what makes the tragedy that occurred on the morning of Wednesday 15 December, 2010 on the shoreline of Christmas Island all the more tragic is that human beings had to watch (and listen) helplessly whilst fellow humans died just metres away. The stories of the traumatised witnesses have painted a horrific picture of...
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Ahmad Al Akabi: Another asylum seeker death in Villawood

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November 18, 2010
Ahmad Al Akabi: Another asylum seeker death in Villawood

Ahmad Al-Akabi, aged 41, had a wife and was a father of three girls aged two, four and seven.  He had come to Australia and had hoped to eventually bring his family with him.  He arrived by boat.  He was from Iraq.  He is reported to have been in detention for over a year:  first in...
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