November 30, 202:
Information Clearing House
-- "SCF"
The world is at risk of having future
generations suffering from routine endorsement of
governments devoid of decency, morality and simple
humanity.
The world has many crises, and probably the most
heart-rending is that of desperately miserable
refugees who have been forced to flee from their
homes. The UN High Commissioner for Refugees, UNHCR,
is a saintly body and does its best to care for
those it can access. Its latest
report indicates that there are now over 84
million people displaced
by conflict, barbaric persecution and climate change
disasters.
On November 11 Filippo Grandi, the head of UNHCR,
issued a plea for greater assistance from rich
countries,
saying that “the international community must
redouble its efforts to make peace, and at the same
time must ensure resources are available to
displaced communities and their hosts.”
Unfortunately most of the international community
couldn’t care less about refugees, as evidenced by
reaction to recent agonising events such as Poland’s
inhumane
treatment of the thousands attempting to enter
from Belarus, whose President is quite as cruel and
pitiless as the Polish authorities who have repelled
so many of them.
The BBC
noted that as refugees “are summarily expelled
from Poland and Belarus refuses to allow them back
in, people are finding themselves stranded and
freezing in Poland’s forests. Several have died of
hypothermia.” But who cares? Certainly not such
officials as the head of Poland’s National Security
Council, Pawel Soloch, who said on November 8 that
he expected “attacks on our border to be renewed by
groups of several hundred people” overnight. “Attacks”?
By unarmed, frozen, desperate, pathetic exiles who
wish only for decency, understanding and support?
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And in the waters of the freezing, stormy English
Channel, there are similar hideous dramas of which
the latest involved the capsize of a boat trying to
travel from France to England, causing the
death of 17 men, seven women and three
adolescents – two boys and a girl. One of the women
was pregnant.
The figures strike a chord of bleakness, but not
in the hearts of such as the poisonous Priti Patel,
the United Kingdom’s minister for home affairs,
responsible for refugee matters, who is a proven
liar (for which she was dismissed by then Prime
Minister Theresa May) and
bully of her subordinates (“Standards chief Sir
Alex Allan
found that Ms Patel had broken the code
governing ministers’ behaviour but Prime Minister
Boris Johnson rejected his findings, saying he did
not think Ms Patel was a bully and had ‘full
confidence’ in her”.)
Patel’s lack of compassion was demonstrated by
her statement about “illegal immigration” in early
November, when she
declared that refugees seeking to start a new
life were mainly cheats. She claimed that in the
previous year “70% of individuals on small boats are
single men who are effectively economic migrants.
They are not genuine asylum seekers.” What is
strikingly ironic, of course, is
that “in the 1960s, her parents emigrated to the
UK” from Uganda. And in an October 2012 media
interview Patel
affirmed that “coming from a country where
you’re persecuted means that you want to work hard
and to contribute to the society where you end up.
You become patriotic because you make your new
country your home, and, as a result, you live and
play by its values.” Quite right. But it seems that
the flint-hearted Patel is no longer prepared to
give anyone a chance to do that.
As
reported on November 21 Patel’s latest trick to
punish refugees is to detain them on England’s
beaches and then have them “soaked, shivering and
traumatised… bundled on to buses and driven almost
500 miles – a journey of eight to nine hours – to an
immigration detention centre called Dungavel” in
Scotland.
The British government’s combination of
intolerance, malice and incompetence concerning
refugees is appalling, but it’s nothing new. A
recently published book by an Afghan refugee, Abbas
Nazari, called
After the Tampa, tells us a great deal
about the Australian government’s even worse
treatment of the stricken and helpless. As the
Australian Broadcasting Corporation
reported on November 26, “When the Taliban were
at the height of their power in 2001, Abbas Nazari’s
parents were faced with a choice: stay and face
persecution in their homeland, or seek security for
their young children elsewhere. The family embarked
on a harrowing journey from the mountains of
Afghanistan to a small fishing boat in the Indian
Ocean, crammed with more than 400 other asylum
seekers. When the boat started to sink, they were
saved by a cargo ship, the Tampa. However,
one of the largest maritime rescues in modern
history quickly turned into an international
stand-off, as Australia closed its doors to these
asylum seekers.”
The Australian government’s actions were not only
contrary to international law and the Charter of the
United Nations, they were sickeningly amoral and had
the aim of winning the impending national election
for the Liberal Party whose leader at the time, John
Howard, and his servile slimy acolytes merit the
deepest contempt for their conduct. If there is
indeed a Hell, they deserve its flames for eternity.
As
recounted in the Sydney Morning Herald
the Captain of the Norwegian freighter Tampa, Arne
Rinnan (a man with more moral and physical courage
in his little fingers than these politicos have in
their entire anatomies), “defied orders from
Canberra to stay away from Australian waters with
his cargo of 433 rescued asylum seekers, many of
them in urgent need of medical attention, and
proceeded towards Christmas Island, the tiny
Australian territory below Java. It ended, after
heavily armed SAS troops seized control of the ship,
with John Howard introducing retrospective
legislation giving his government the power to
remove the Tampa, and any similarly unwelcome
vessels in the future, irrespective of the
circumstances or the consequences.”
Nazari’s description of the assault on the ship
by armed special forces troops, covered in black
from head to toe, is spine-chilling. There was
absolutely no need for these people to carry
weapons, because the wretched refugees certainly had
none. These swaggering military louts put the fear
of death into children who had been terrified by
Taliban savages. We have no way of assessing to what
extent the mental health of the refugees was damaged
by Prime Minister Howard’s cynical re-election
antics, but one person not affected was Abbas
Nazari, who was fortunate enough to be taken, aged
seven, with his family to New Zealand, rather than
consigned to the Australian-run refugee
concentration camp on Nauru island, 4,500 kilometres
north east of Australia, where detention conditions
were appalling. (An Amnesty International
representative
observed that “having worked in most of the
world’s conflict zones over the last 15 years, I
thought I had learned enough about suffering,
injustice and despair. But what I saw and heard on
Nauru will haunt me forever.”)
It is amazing and most gratifying that Nazari’s
personal success, achieved through his innate
intelligence and sheer hard work,
includes selection as a Fulbright Scholar which
is an achievement that should be brought to the
attention of Priti Patel, who is so determined to
deny asylum to refugees who she
alleges are “economic migrants”.
In yet another Patel irony, it was
noted on November 23 that the British
government’s scheme to attract Nobel and other
laureates to settle in Britain and contribute to its
economy had failed completely, with not a single
applicant having come forward, in spite of Patel’s
declaration that her “point-based” immigration
rules are intended to “attract the best and
brightest based on the skills and talent they have,
not where they’ve come from.”
Patel and her best and brightest colleagues in
countries such as Australia, Belarus and Poland (and
many, many others) have not a scrap of compassion
for the tens of millions of destitute despairing
refugees displaced from their homelands. The world
is facing a terrible humanitarian crisis — but is
also at risk of having future generations suffering
from routine endorsement of governments devoid of
decency, morality and simple humanity.
By Brian Cloughley, British and Australian
armies’ veteran, former deputy head of the UN
military mission in Kashmir and Australian defense
attaché in Pakistan
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