The Christian Montagnards once fought alongside
US forces during the Vietnam War and have suffered the repercussions from that
move ever since. The fate of asylum
seekers from Vietnam hiding in Cambodia's remote northeast has focused a
spotlight again on the country's policy towards would-be refugees. One
provincial police chief warned the Montagnards would be arrested on sight and
returned to Vietnam, as per a request from the government there.
In a statement issued from its Geneva headquarters, the UN
High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) said it was concerned police might hand
over the Montagnards to Vietnamese
authorities, putting their lives in danger. "The involuntary return of the
individuals to Vietnam would represent a violation of international legal
obligations ... UNHCR strongly urges the government to refrain from - and
instruct local authorities to refrain from - such action." Asylum seekers "should
not be sent back where their lives or freedoms could be in danger", said
Vivian Tan, UNHCR spokeswoman in Bangkok.
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In return for $35 million in Australian aid money and
resettlement costs, Cambodia has agreed to take in asylum seekers that
Australia has refused to accept. Critics of the so-called Australia
"refugee dumping deal" said Cambodia is ill equipped to adequately
provide for refugees, pointing out Phnom Penh's track record of deporting
asylum seekers, such as the Montagnards, considered dissidents by China and
Vietnam.
Deporting the Montagnards back to Vietnam "would show
just how little refugee rights and protection mean in Cambodia, and no amount
of public relations spin to the contrary from Canberra will convince anyone
otherwise", said Phil Robertson, deputy director of Human Rights Watch's
Asia division.
Sailors from the Royal Australian Navy say they have
suffered trauma after having to pull dead asylum seekers from the ocean while
on border patrol. Some complained government policy had led to the deaths of
dozens of asylum seekers. Former and serving sailors on border patrol
operations told of having to retrieve bodies from the ocean after vessels
carrying asylum seekers had capsized or sunk. According to some of the
interviewees, decisions taken by the Australian government indirectly led to
the deaths of asylum seekers at sea.
"All we found was probably a line about 70 miles long
of bodies," he said, according to ABC. "We fished them out for as
long as we could, 'til we were full. And that wasn't uncommon." A serving
navy officer said ships' captains were sometimes told not to board vessels
until they were in Australian waters so the passengers could then be subject to
Australian migration law. On at least one occasion a boat carrying asylum
seekers sank as a result. "In the incident that I've described where the
boat overturned and people died, that pressure came from Canberra," she
said.
François Crépeau, the UN’s special rapporteur for migrants’
rights has censured the British government immigration policies, saying they
have endangered the lives of migrants. He slammed the UK Home Office for
sending only one official to take part in a European search and rescue mission
aimed at deterring migrant deaths in the Mediterranean Sea, the official[A1]
arguing that stopping search and rescue missions would stave migrants off
Europe. “Not supporting search and rescue operations means letting them die.
This is what happens, if you don’t search and rescue them; they die. If we
accept that, I think we go well beyond the moral boundaries of our political
system.”
Politicians must stand up to the “bullshit” populist
stereotypes about migration in Britain amid concerns that border control
policies across the EU are putting people’s lives in danger he warned. “The
fantasy is that there is a core British culture that was created probably 2,000
years ago and carried on, and now it’s being threatened by all those barbarians
that are coming to our gate,” he said. “This is utter bullshit, but who is
going to say this? That is why I think we have a problem with political
conversations that we can’t have.” It was a “multicultural, diverse, open
society” that created “Cool Britannia” in the 1990s. “If Britannia is ruled by
the Ukip, or with Ukip-type policies, it is not going to be cool.”
The Canadian professor of law blamed European governments
for wanting a kind of migrant slave labour. Crépeau said there are powerful
economic forces working to maintain the status quo – whereby economic migrants
are attracted to the EU by jobs but often work
illegally, earning well below the minimum wage and living in poor
conditions. But they are unwilling to speak out for fear of being removed from
the country. “We have found a system to subsidise a series of sectors of our
economies by people who have no power and can be exploited at will. This was
the slavery system in the old days,” Crépeau noted.
We live in a period in history where war and conflict are a
more permanent feature affecting a huge proportion of the world population as
never before. The responsibility of western governments and multinationals for
this situation is bigger than ever and millions of people are displaced from
their homes because of this.
There is much in the press about the "problem" of
bogus asylum seekers becoming a drain on a country's resources, and getting
involved in criminal and fraudulent activity etc. Every day, the politicians try
to out-do each other as to how they would restrict immigration further. Political leaders are promoting myths,
mis-truths and lies simply to win votes. Socialists see these people as yet
another group to be targeted by the ruling class and their friends in the
capitalist media who seek to blame them for the failings in their own capitalist
system. The fact these people are taking such desperate measures to reach here
in the first place should make us begin to question the underlying reasons for
this phenomena, and to provide a straight forward answer to those people who
would seek to make asylum seekers scapegoats for the ongoing problems.
Socialists do not condone deceit or criminality but we recognise that
criminality and deceit are but symptoms of a capitalist system that forces some
sections of society down the criminal path in order to survive. When a man or
woman cannot feed their family then they will do whatever it takes. This is
forced on them by the material conditions of the capitalist system that cannot
even provide the basic necessities of life for masses of the world population. When
an individual is robbed of their dignity and self respect, on a daily basis by
a system that seeks to exploit and profit at that individuals expense then it
is no surprise that there are people who feel left out and dispossessed. There
is no such person as an 'illegal asylum seeker'. By law, anyone has the right
to seek sanctuary and apply for asylum, and to stay until a final decision has
been made.
When asylum seekers – children, women and men who have to
flee their homes and families and make the hazardous and often outright
dangerous journey across the globe – arrive in this state, their ordeal is far
from over. Rather than being given the opportunity to rebuild their lives, they
are isolated from society. They are not allowed to work, they can not even work
until they are given refugee status. Some have to live under the restrictive
regime of the centre (e.g. meals are served at set times three times per day
only) and have to make do with a bare subsistence. They have to remain in this
situation until their case is finished they are at the mercy of the state to be
moved from centre to centre. Asylum seekers have no access to social housing;
they are forced into hard to let properties.
The European Anti-Poverty Network sums up the effects “This
system directly creates poverty and social exclusion as well as isolation and
widespread depression and mental illness.
The explicit exclusion of asylum seekers from integration policies
stores up social problems for the future.” Instead of helping and protecting,
governments of all shades are actively destroying these people’s lives.
People want to move to improve their family’s finances,
escape poverty or flee from war and persecution. In the same way, people choose
to live and work abroad, either where the money is, or to retire in sunnier
climes. Would those who want to restrict
migration into a country also want to stop people moving abroad? Everyone
should be free to move and live where they chose. We should not make it more difficult for
immigrants to get benefits, or to have to pay for health care. The overwhelming majority of migrants want to
work – that is why they travel vast distances from home to live in often
unfriendly cultures.
The attempt is being made to scapegoat asylum seekers,
making them the target of people's fears and diverting attention away from the
failings of the capitalist system. A glimpse of the potential that this gives
for the rise of racism and racist attacks was the hysteria created by the media
coverage of the Roma. The resources are there to provide everyone with a decent
home, job, health care and education. The problem is the profit-driven
capitalist system - not whether the resources exist, but who controls them.
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