Index

Click on subject of interest shown on the right under the heading "labels" to see all relevant posts

To look at letters (and some replies) sent to politicians and newspapers, scroll down the index on the right hand side and select the appropriate heading.

Note the blog allows multiple labelling and all letters to politicians are under "letters to pollies".

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30.5.15

Letters to Opposition and cross bench members 2014-2015

May 2015

letter sent all labor Senators

Dear Senator
I understand from press reports that the Labor Party will discuss the Party’s policy on asylum seekers when it holds its conference in July. I welcome that, and I earnestly hope that the ALP will adopt a principled policy stance which reflects our international obligations  under the UN Refugee Convention and which recognises  the immense harm that the current Coalition policy, largely supported by the ALP, is inflicting on innocent people, many of them children.  That harm includes the emerging evidence of the sexual abuse of women and children in the Nauru detention centre.

Richard Marles, in an interview on Sky News in early February, stated that: “We need to be doing everything practicable to get these children out of detention as quickly as possible.” So what does that mean in policy terms? To date, we have not been told. 

In relation to Nauru, it has to mean the closure of the detention  centre and an end to the pretence that releasing families into the Nauruan community constitutes a solution to the problem. 

Save the Children, which has considerable experience of the situation, has repeatedly stated that Nauru is not a sustainable long-term option for the resettlement of refugees.

It is surely time for the ALP to recognise that the current policy stance is deeply flawed, is in contravention of our international obligations and is inflicting intolerable harm on a group of already-traumatised people. It’s time to move on from the sloganeering of “stopping the boats” and from the convenient lie  that the policy is all about saving lives at sea. 

The ALP should work with other nations in the region to develop regional solutions to a complex problem that is not going to go away, and that a civilised nation cannot turn its back on.There are many Australian citizens in our communities who are looking to our political leaders to rediscover their roots by adopting principled, humane and fair policies that can be confidently explained and promoted to the electorate.

I do hope, therefore, that the ALP, with your support, will listen to those voices within its ranks who are advocating a change in policy; a policy which is rooted in sound principles, international law and common humanity.
  Yours sincerely,
  Mike

_______________________________________________________________________________________
9.12.14

Dear Senator Xenophon,

I was dismayed to learn that you voted for the government's  Marine and Maritime Powers amendments in the Senate last week. I realise that you may have felt under immense pressure to support the bill, given that the Minister for Immigration had cynically linked its passage to the release of children from detention on Christmas Island. It saddens me greatly that you caved in to this bullying tactic.  

You know as well as I that there was nothing in the  amendments relating to the release of children in detention, and that the government could have chosen to release all children and their families from detention at any time since coming to office. 

You have now passed into law a most shameful piece of legislation, which gives the Minister for Immigration unprecedented, unchallengeable and secret powers to determine the fate of individual asylum seekers. 

You have removed all references to the Refugee Convention from the legislation, notwithstanding the fact that Australia is a signatory. You have decided that Australia can now flout its international obligations with its "new, independent and self-contained statutory framework". 

You must be well aware that you have given powers to the government which will enable it to return asylum seekers to places where they have been, or will likely be, persecuted, tortured or worse. 

You must also know that the reinstatement of TPVs is a backward step. As in the past, placing vulnerable, traumatised asylum seekers in limbo, for purely political ends, will cause serious damage to their mental health and wellbeing. Last time round, more than 90% of asylum seekers on TPVs were ultimately granted permanent protection, but the cost of attempting to repair their damaged lives has been immense. 

Why repeat the same mistakes?

The passing of this legislation was a very dark day for asylum seekers, for the upholding of human rights and for our international obligations. We should all hang our heads in shame.

                                                                                                            
Yours sincerely,

Mike


_________________________________________________________________________________
Dear Mr. Shorten,

I am writing to you to express my concern, distress and disgust over the increasingly draconian measures adopted by the Coalition Government since taking Office last year, in particular the Migration and Maritime Powers Legislation Amendment (Resolving the Asylum Legacy Caseload) Bill 2014, and to urge you to act to ensure that this Bill is not passed.
Australian forces have spent much of this century in countries defending the rights and lives of citizens against brutal regimes, while at the same time our leaders “advise” those successful in fleeing these regimes to modify their behaviour to allow their “safe” return to homelands. The incongruence of Government policy makes passage of this Amendment bewildering and completely unjustifiable.
The annals will remember this government as one devoid of compassion and humanity, who actively contributed to the prolonged physical and mental torture and deaths of some of the World’s most vulnerable people
You have the power to act with decency and integrity to turn this situation around- I urge you to exercise that power.

Yours sincerely



Karina Daniels






27 November 2014________________________________________________________________

Judy has sent poems to 150 members of Federal Parliament.

response from Sarah Hanson-Young


Dear Judith
Thank you for taking the time to write to Senator Hanson-Young, and for your compassion towards asylum seekers. I have passed on your message to the Senator, who has asked me to respond on her behalf
Senator Hanson-Young and the Australian Greens, including Senator Adam Bandt of course, will continue to stand up for asylum seekers and refugees.
We thank you for sharing this lovely poem with us, and would encourage you to share it with all the Senators. Every voice is heard and sends the message that Australians will not support these cruel and inhumane policies that are hurting vulnerable people who have fled to our country from war and persecution.
Thank you again for contacting Senator Hanson-Young; we look forward to hearing from you in the future.
Kind regards
Katie Milanowicz
Electorate Officer
Level 7 / 147 Pirie St, Adelaide, SA 5000
TEL +61 8 8227 0425   |   FAX  +61 8 8227 0426   |  EMAIL katie.milanowicz@aph.gov.au




Response from Clive Palmer is below



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Melissa Parke, plans to table a motion in Labor caucus on asylum policy. She is saying that  conditions on Manus and Nauru are “unsafe, inhumane and insanitary” and claims that current policy is in breach of Labor’s platform and international law.
  We could urge our members to send a brief email to our 5 NSW Labor senators along the lines of :
“ I am greatly heartened to learn that Labor caucus is planning to discuss the current party policy on the treatment of asylum seekers. I agree with Melissa Parkes that the conditions on Manus and Nauru are inhumane, unsafe and insanitary, and that they are in breach of international law.  I urge you, in the interests of common humanity, justice and compliance with the International Convention on Refugees, to change current Labor policy, to campaign for the closure of Manus and Nauru detention centres and  to  support a return to onshore, speedy processing of asylum seeker claims”.

Senators’ details:


John Faulkner: senator.faulkner@aph.gov.au  
Deborah O’Neill: www.aph.gov.au/Senator_O’Neill  contact - ask a question
Ursula Stephens: senator.stephens@aph.gov.au



Senators decide how they can be contacted. Some like Senator Faulkner offers an email address, others like Doug Cameron allows contact through "www.aph.gov.au" which provides a form to allow you to ask a question of the senator.

Sam Dastyari does not offer a facility to contact him, so we have created an email address for him, but do not know if he will receive the email.

This is an interesting reflection on the way the system works!

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Dear Seantor Dastyari


I understand that your Labor Caucus is planning to discuss your policy on the treatment of asylum seekers. 

Melissa Parkes has stated that the conditions on Manus and Nauru are inhumane, unsafe and insanitary, and that they are in breach of international law.  

Please support Melissa's move to campaign for the closure of Manus and Nauru detention centres and for a return to onshore, speedy processing of asylum seeker claims.

The cruel approach by the coalition government to asylum seekers has been repeated for the people of Australia by their cruel budget.

Your support of their policies for asylum seekers gives the impression you are agreeing with their view of the world e.g. people do not deserve any support from the Government.

regards


David 
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Dear Senator Dastyari,
I was very pleased to learn recently that Melissa Parke MP, intends to raise the issue of Labor Party policy in relation to refugees in caucus next week. I strongly agree with Melissa that the Abbott  government policy, initiated and supported by Labor, is cruel and inhumane, and in contravention of international law.  The policy of the present government, and of the opposition, brings shame on us all. It is time, surely, for Labor to put principle before cynical pragmatism, and to rethink party policy. The Labor party must urgently develop a policy which  seeks an end to offshore detention, which demands an immediate end to the detention of children and which ensures that asylum seekers are treated in accordance with our international treaty obligations. The idea that asylum seekers might be resettled in Cambodia is utterly abhorrent, and I am dismayed that both Bill Shorten and Tanya Plibersek have refused to rule out Labor support for the proposal.
Yours sincerely
Mike

Below are letters sent by Mike and a reply from John Faulkner


Mike wrote to Melissa Parke MP
 I am greatly heartened to learn that you will be taking the issue of Labor Party asylum policy to caucus. The present policy is utterly shameful, and should never have been adopted by a party which I had always understood to support the most vulnerable and disadvantaged. It's time to get back to true Labor values. I do hope that you have some impact with your colleagues.
Mike 

Melissa Parke's reply


Dear Mike,

Thank you so much for your email, your encouragement and support.  It has been heartening to have reinforced for me the fact that many Australians want to see a sensible, compassionate approach to asylum seekers, and one that is consistent with international law and moral principle.

I certainly hope this motion will be part of a process that can help the ALP to a better and more sensible position on this issue.  The way ahead from here will not be straightforward, even in Caucus, and I hope you are able to see the value in what I can achieve with the support of other like-minded colleagues in the near future, as a step in what will inevitably require a sustained effort.  As a result of Senate estimates occurring over the next fortnight, the motion will likely come before Caucus in about three weeks’ time when all Labor members and Senators are able to participate in the debate.

Kind regards,

Hon Melissa Parke MP
Federal Labor Member for Fremantle

------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Senator Faulkner

Thank you for your prompt response.

Your senior position in the Labor Party and your good standing, within the Australian electorate as a whole, is a rare achievement in these troubled times. As our nation descends into barbarity under the current Junta the treatment of asylum seekers has become an even more important issue in terms of what sort of society we want to live in.  We have seen the horrors of the mandatory detention regime multiplied many time by the "out sourcing' of Australia's responsibilities under the Convention and now satisfied that the "refugee problem" is solved the current government is picking off the next most vulnerable groups in our society. How the Labor caucus votes on this issue is crucial to any sustained support for your side of politics and for the greater good of our nation so we hope that the caucus does the honourable thing when you meet to vote on this resolution.

Regards

John and Michele Pollock

Landsberry, Kathryn (Sen J. Faulkner) wrote:
Dear Michele and John,
Thank you for your email concerning the motion to be considered by the Federal Parliamentary Labor Party Caucus on the issue of current asylum seeker policy and offshore detention.
While it has _never_ been my practice to canvass Caucus votes in the public arena, I do acknowledge your concern about this very important issue.
I have made a number of speeches in the Senate restating my commitment to the fair and humane treatment of asylum seekers and refugees to Australia.  I have included links below to some of these speeches for your reference.
Regardless of the policies of the present Australian government, asylum seekers will continue to seek refuge here, and Australia has obligations under various international treaties to ensure that their basic human rights are respected and protected. We also have a moral obligation to ensure that asylum seekers to Australia find compassion, dignity and respect within our borders, as well as protection from persecution.
Once again, thank you for writing to me to express your views on this issue, which I have certainly read and noted.
With best wishes.
Yours sincerely,
*JOHN FAULKNER*
*26 May 2014 *
_Matters of Public Importance - Asylum Seekers_ <http://www.senatorjohnfaulkner.com.au/file.php?file=/news/USYVVDUTQO/index.html>
_Adjournment speech - The United Nations Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees_ <http://www.senatorjohnfaulkner.com.au/file.php?file=/news/BAXUKSYLDQ/index.html>
_Adjournment speech - The United Nations Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees (Part 2)_ <http://www.senatorjohnfaulkner.com.au/file.php?file=/news/TEVCUGEWPJ/index.html>
-----Original Message-----
From: john pollock [mailto:unkya1@bigpond.net.au]
Sent: Monday, 26 May 2014 7:40 PM
To: Cameron, Doug (Senator); Dastyari, Sam (Senator); Faulkner, John (Senator); Deborah O'Neill; Stephens, Ursula (Senator)
Subject: Asylum Seeker Policy
We are greatly heartened to learn that Labor caucus is planning to discuss the current party policy on the treatment of asylum seekers. We agree with Melissa Parkes that the conditions on Manus and Nauru are inhumane, unsafe and insanitary, and that they are in breach of international law.  We urge you, in the interests of common humanity, justice and compliance with the International Convention on Refugees, to change current Labor policy, to campaign for the closure of Manus and Nauru detention centres and  to  support a return to onshore, speedy processing of asylum seeker claims
Michele and John


Mike's letter to Senator John Faulkner 19 May


John Faulkner’s reply
Dear Mike and Marlene,

Thank you both for your emails of 19 May 2014 expressing your serious concerns regarding Australia’s current immigration laws, and seeking my support for a review of the Australian Labor Party’s policy for asylum seekers to Australia.

Please be assured that I sympathise with your views on this very important issue, and I have made a number of speeches in the Senate restating my commitment to the fair and humane treatment of asylum seekers and refugees to Australia.  I have included links below to some of these speeches for your reference.

Regardless of the policies of the present Australian government, asylum seekers will continue to seek refuge here, and Australia has obligations under various international treaties to ensure that their basic human rights are respected and protected.  We also have a moral obligation to ensure that asylum seekers to Australia find compassion, dignity and respect within our borders, as well as protection from persecution.

Once again, thank you for writing to me to express your views on this issue, which I have certainly read and noted.
 With best wishes.

Yours sincerely,
 JOHN FAULKNER   22 May 2014
----------------------------------------------------------------- Mike's emails to the other NSW Labor Senators


Senator Deborah O'Neill
Senator Stephen
Senator Doug Cameron

I was very pleased to learn that Melissa Parke MP intends to raise the Labor Party's current policy on asylum seekers in caucus next week. I strongly support her view that the current policy is inhumane, cruel and in serious conflict with both Labor values and international law. It's time to put principle above cynical pragmatism. Labor should develop a new policy, which should include the closure of offshore detention centres and a return to the humane treatment of asylum seekers. I do hope that you will support her argument when the matter comes to caucus.
Mike

Reply from Deborah O'Neill


Thank you for writing.

The Labor Party is pro-immigration and pro-refugees and is committed to lifting Australia’s refugee intake.

The contribution that migration has made to Australia needs to be acknowledged. We are a nation built on migration. The fabric of Australian society is richer from the experience of migration, including the contributions of those Australians who came here as refugees or asylum seekers. Our modern communities are a great example of what happens when we welcome migrants to Australia – to settle, work and contribute to and be a part of our story.

Providing economic and social support to asylum seekers is necessary, fair and humane. It does not mean that refugees and asylum seekers receive more benefits than Australians do. People who seek asylum in our country are not doing anything ‘illegal’.

Seeking asylum is a right recognised under domestic and international law.

It is the people smugglers, not the asylum seekers, who should be prosecuted for plying this miserable and dangerous trade. We cannot afford to sit idly by and watch criminals sell tickets on unsafe boats. It is not humane to allow desperate people to spend thousands of dollars on a ticket on an unsafe, unseaworthy vessel that puts lives at risk. 

We do not condone this illegal trade that preys on the desperate and vulnerable.

When in Government, Labor implemented the PNG Regional Resettlement Arrangement. There is no doubt the current reduction in the loss of life at sea is due in large part to the effectiveness of this policy.

Labor will continue to listen and consult widely on this important issue.

Yours sincerely,

SenateSig - DS

------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Alternative wording in an email to Labor Senators NSW

Reply from John Faulkner

Dear David,

Thank you for your email concerning the motion to be considered by the Federal Parliamentary Labor Party Caucus on the issue of current asylum seeker policy and offshore detention.

While it has never been my practice to canvass Caucus votes in the public arena, I do acknowledge your concern about this very important issue. 

I have made a number of speeches in the Senate restating my commitment to the fair and humane treatment of asylum seekers and refugees to Australia.  I have included links below to some of these speeches for your reference.

Regardless of the policies of the present Australian government, asylum seekers will continue to seek refuge here, and Australia has obligations under various international treaties to ensure that their basic human rights are respected and protected.  We also have a moral obligation to ensure that asylum seekers to Australia find compassion, dignity and respect within our borders, as well as protection from persecution.

Once again, thank you for writing to me to express your views on this issue, which I have certainly read and noted.

With best wishes.

Yours sincerely,


JOHN FAULKNER

26 May 2014

Email to Labor Senators NSW


 I understand that your Labor Caucus is planning to discuss your policy on the treatment of asylum seekers. 

Melissa Parkes has stated that the conditions on Manus and Nauru are inhumane, unsafe and insanitary, and that they are in breach of international law.  

Please support Melissa's move to campaign for the closure of Manus and Nauru detention centres and for a return to onshore, speedy processing of asylum seeker claims.

The cruel approach by the coalition government to asylum seekers has been repeated for the people of Australia by their cruel budget.

Your support of their policies for asylum seekers gives the impression you are agreeing with their view of the world e.g. people do not deserve any support from the Government.

regards

David 

24 May 2014

29.5.15

Response to pressure on Labor Party policy

Response to pressure on Labor Party to change their policy on Asylum Seekers letters to all Labor senators ahead of Party Conference

A positive response from Senator Sue Lines
Mike
Sent: Thursday, May 28, 2015 11:15 AM
To: 'Mike'
Subject: RE: Labor policy on asylum seekers

Thanks for your email Mike.

Sue is a strong advocate for change to our policy on asylum seekers and as you have noted this will be discussed at the upcoming National ALP Conference.

Sue will be part of these discussions in both her capacity as a Senator and a member of Labor for Refugees.

Thanks for taking the time to email us we have noted all your valid points.

27.5.15

costs of Nauru and Manus Island detention centres

The federal government has spent $2.4bn over two years maintaining offshore detention centres on Nauru and Manus Island, including the detention of 90 children on Nauru, a Senate committee has heard.
A total of $403m was spent operating the immigration detention centre on Manus Island from July 2014 to the end of April 2015, representatives from the immigration department told a Senate estimates committee on Tuesday.
A further $229m was spent on capital expenditure on Manus.
Nearly $359m was spent at the same time operating the Nauru facility, and nearly $57m on capital expenditures.
The total figure of $1.1bn in the 2014–15 financial year is down slightly from the previous financial year, when the government spent $1.3bn maintaining the two offshore facilities.
About 173 unaccompanied minors have travelled to Australia by boat since 2012, the committee heard. Most of them – 95 – were 17 years of age, but the youngest was just six. The children either embarked on the boat trip alone, or their parents perished while making the journey to Australia.
Ninety children remain on Nauru, with a further 136 kept in onshore detention centres. Seventy children live in Darwin’s Wickham Point facility.
The average time a child remains in detention is 345 days, but one child has been in detention for 1,774 days – about 4.8 years.

The majority of asylum-seeker children – nearly 1,100 – are in community detention, following the government’s promise to remove children from Christmas Island by Christmas 2014, as long as the Senate passed its omnibus asylum legacy caseload bill.

Why does Tony Abbot hate boat people"?


Put pressure on Labor Senators about Policy on asylum seekers

letter sent all labor Senators

Dear Senator
I understand from press reports that the Labor Party will discuss the Party’s policy on asylum seekers when it holds its conference in July. I welcome that, and I earnestly hope that the ALP will adopt a principled policy stance which reflects our international obligations  under the UN Refugee Convention and which recognises  the immense harm that the current Coalition policy, largely supported by the ALP, is inflicting on innocent people, many of them children.  That harm includes the emerging evidence of the sexual abuse of women and children in the Nauru detention centre.

Richard Marles, in an interview on Sky News in early February, stated that: “We need to be doing everything practicable to get these children out of detention as quickly as possible.” So what does that mean in policy terms? To date, we have not been told. 

In relation to Nauru, it has to mean the closure of the detention  centre and an end to the pretence that releasing families into the Nauruan community constitutes a solution to the problem. 

Save the Children, which has considerable experience of the situation, has repeatedly stated that Nauru is not a sustainable long-term option for the resettlement of refugees.

It is surely time for the ALP to recognise that the current policy stance is deeply flawed, is in contravention of our international obligations and is inflicting intolerable harm on a group of already-traumatised people. It’s time to move on from the sloganeering of “stopping the boats” and from the convenient lie  that the policy is all about saving lives at sea. 

The ALP should work with other nations in the region to develop regional solutions to a complex problem that is not going to go away, and that a civilised nation cannot turn its back on.There are many Australian citizens in our communities who are looking to our political leaders to rediscover their roots by adopting principled, humane and fair policies that can be confidently explained and promoted to the electorate.

I do hope, therefore, that the ALP, with your support, will listen to those voices within its ranks who are advocating a change in policy; a policy which is rooted in sound principles, international law and common humanity.
  Yours sincerely,
  Mike

Response to pressure on Labor Party to change their policy on Asylum Seekers letters to all Labor senators ahead of Party Conference

A positive response from Senator Sue Lines
Mike
Sent: Thursday, May 28, 2015 11:15 AM
To: 'Mike'
Subject: RE: Labor policy on asylum seekers

Thanks for your email Mike.

Sue is a strong advocate for change to our policy on asylum seekers and as you have noted this will be discussed at the upcoming National ALP Conference.

Sue will be part of these discussions in both her capacity as a Senator and a member of Labor for Refugees.

Thanks for taking the time to email us we have noted all your valid points.

26.5.15

Newsletter for 26 May 2015 Rural Australians for Refugees Bellingen and Nambucca Districts

Hi Everyone


Stall at Valla Markets Saturday 6 June 2015

Following our very successful presence at Bellingen market in May, we are now planning for our next market at Valla Beach on Saturday  6th June. 

As usual, we are looking for volunteers to help with the stall. If you can spare an hour or two between 8.00 am and  1.00 pm, then please let Mike know by emailing him at mandm.griffin2@bigpond.com, or phone 6569 5419.  It would be good to see some new faces, and you will enjoy the experience !



see Facebook https://www.facebook.com/pages/Rural-Australians-for-Refugees-Bellingen-and-Nambucca-Districts/269696303205083


This newsletter is stored here for archive purposes. To read complete newsletter click below

22.5.15

"Lest we Forget" Peter Sobey's letter "treat fellow human beings with compassion"

Dear Editor, Nambucca Guardian

One of the most common phrases in use in society is “Lest We Forget”. It is most commonly used to remember the sacrifices that so many people made in so many wars over the last hundred years.

More than sixty million people died in WWII – that is around 30,000 people a day for six years. This conflagration had a huge cost and we would be extremely foolish to forget the lessons learned.

In 1939 the boat St Louis left Europe with 937 Jews fleeing Nazi persecution. They were met in Cuba and Florida by anti-Semitic demonstrations and refused permission to disembark. The ship had to return to Europe and many of the people ended up being murdered in gas chambers.

One of the lessons learned from WWII was that people fleeing persecution should be shown compassion and offered asylum. This lesson was codified in the UN Refugee Convention to which Australia duly signed and ratified because it was the right thing to do.

Today, in the Straights of Malacca, thousands of people are floating around in the ocean, dying of starvation and thirst, because no nation will grant them asylum. Malaysia and Indonesia have been emboldened by the Australian stance of pushing boats back out to sea. Our Prime Minister, Tony Abbott, has even seen fit to congratulate them for doing so.

The issue of asylum seekers is a complex issue that can not be usefully addressed with asinine three word slogans. It can not be solved by persecuting asylum seekers with conditions that are worse than what they are fleeing. That path will just diminish us. It is morally bankrupt.

If one would like an example of someone who has lost their moral compass witness any government politician seeking to justify the imprisonment of children in our gulags in Manus Island and Nauru.

When the Government claims that it is stopping people dying at sea, what it is really saying is that it is better that these people die somewhere else where we do not have to take any responsibility.

There is a truism that those who do not learn from history are condemned to repeat it. All the more reason that we should ponder the words “Lest We Forget” and seek to build a world where we treat our fellow human beings with compassion and respect.


Mike letters to Guardian News

Peter Sobey’s letter (Guardian News 21st May) is a timely and important reminder to us not to lose sight  of our moral, ethical and international responsibilities in these turbulent times. Do we still remember: “I was hungry and you gave me to eat. I was thirsty and you gave me to drink”? I would like to believe that we do, and that we are still capable, as a nation, of showing compassion and generosity of spirit.  It is clear, however, that our political leaders prefer the easy option of resorting to jingoism and sloganeering rather than grappling with the complex issues relating to people fleeing their countries by whatever means, in a bid to seek safety for themselves and their families. These wretched souls would, of course, like all of us, prefer to remain at home in their familiar surroundings, and would surely do so if they knew that they would be safe, and free from persecution or starvation. Our leaders, sadly, knowing that there are more votes in taking a hard line than in demonstrating some compassion and leadership, persist in demonising asylum seekers and in peddling the lie that their sole purpose in refusing to help is to save lives at sea. Let us ask them just three questions:
  • Are the policies that they have adopted – both Coalition and Labor – compatible with their oft-proclaimed Christian beliefs? 
  • Are the recent pronouncements by our Prime Minister about the thousands of asylum seekers adrift at sea compatible with his much-vaunted leadership role in the region? 
  • Are the actions of the Coalition government compatible with our responsibilities under the UN Refugee Convention, to which our government is a signatory?
Sadly, the answer is “nope, nope, nope”.
We deserve, and asylum seekers deserve, better than this.
Mike 

Mikes letter to Coffs Coast Advocate

Dear editor,
Peter Sobey’s letter (Advocate 23rd May) is a timely and important reminder to us not to lose sight  of our moral, ethical and international responsibilities in these turbulent times. Do we still remember: “I was hungry and you gave me to eat. I was thirsty and you gave me to drink”? I would like to believe that we do, and that we are still capable, as a nation, of showing compassion and generosity of spirit.  It is clear, however, that our political leaders prefer the easy option of resorting to jingoism and sloganeering rather than grappling with the complex issues relating to people fleeing their countries by whatever means, in a bid to seek safety for themselves and their families. These wretched souls would, of course, like all of us, prefer to remain at home in their familiar surroundings, and would surely do so if they knew that they would be safe, and free from persecution or starvation. Our leaders, sadly, knowing that there are more votes in taking a hard line  than in demonstrating some compassion and leadership, persist in demonising asylum seekers and in peddling the lie that their sole purpose in refusing to help is to save lives at sea. Let us ask them just three questions:
  • Are the policies that they have adopted – both Coalition and Labor – compatible with their oft-proclaimed Christian beliefs? 
  • Are the recent pronouncements by our Prime Minister about the thousands of asylum seekers adrift at sea compatible with his much-vaunted leadership role in the region? 
  • Are the actions of the Coalition government compatible with our responsibilities under the UN Refugee Convention, to which our government is a signatory?
Sadly, the answer to all three questions is “nope, nope, nope”.
We deserve, and asylum seekers deserve, better leadership than this.
Mike