The Chronicle

Brave souls symbolic

- ERIN MOLAN

WHAT a week it’s been of stories highlighti­ng bravery in all its forms. The courage and dignity of our greatest generation has been rightly remembered as we sadly farewelled the last remaining NSW veteran of the Rats of Tobruk Ernie Wilson.

Equal parts stubborn, determined and utterly heroic, Ernie and his mates resisted a brutal and unrelentin­g enemy siege over eight months in 1941, carving their slogan “no surrender” into Australian history. A world away and several generation­s later, another form of courage is on display.

I am not just talking about the Ukrainians, whose battlefiel­d bravery might be somewhat recognisab­le to the original Rats of Tobruk.

No, these heroes are not wearing uniforms nor engaging a convention­al enemy. I am talking about the people of Iran and China currently protesting their own authoritar­ian regimes. It is a unique brand of bravery to take to the streets of your own home country, defying the orders of a government and police force ostensibly there for your protection but with a record of the most horrendous crimes against its own people.

The right to peacefully protest is an incredible thing and is something that we, by and large, enjoy in Australia. Some will dispute this, pointing to the heavy-handed tactics of some of our police forces during Covid lockdowns. However, I maintain that we are fortunate to live in a country where, when examples of police overreach do unfortunat­ely occur, they are the exception rather than the rule and receive swift, thorough media and (sometimes) government scrutiny.

Compare this to China, where an unpreceden­ted display of people power and expression of internal dissatisfa­ction towards Xi Jinping is occurring. While seeded by Covid lockdowns, this domestic tension has been building for a long time.

After years of arrogantly batting away criticism on the global stage, it will be very interestin­g to see how the CCP regime deals with unrest in its own house. Similarly, scenes emerging out of Iran in recent weeks have been, in a word, mind-blowing. The cry “woman, life, freedom” echoes through city streets.

In a brutal tactic to discourage protestors, reports are now emerging that Iran’s Revolution­ary Guard are targeting the children of known dissidents, with many dozens murdered in recent weeks. It takes unimaginab­le courage to continue to speak up in these circumstan­ces.

It also raises the question we tend to ask ourselves every time an oppressed people rise up and throw off, or seek to throw off, the shackles of authoritar­ianism – why now?

In both these countries, alleged human rights atrocities have occurred for decades. Iron-fisted rulers have squashed any prior hint of uprise so quickly and fiercely it barely makes a splash.

I asked myself the same question in the late 1990s as I watched this happen from my bedroom window in Jakarta, Indonesia. After three decades of corruption, nepotism and autonomous rule, the Indonesian people took to the streets and demanded democracy.

With the benefit of hindsight, the origins of this revolution are a little easier to pinpoint. The Asian financial crisis had started the year before, robbing the populace of its purchasing power, savings and livelihood­s. Suharto’s regime had always been heavy-handed, with endemic corruption, but this was the price you paid for an economical­ly stable nation.

When that economic stability disappeare­d, people’s willingnes­s to look the other way did too.

I still vividly remember the flashpoint in May 1998, when students at Trisakti University were gunned down in scenes reminiscen­t of the infamous shootings at Kent State University in 1970.

Straight afterwards, I and other “non-essential” embassy staff and their families were hastily evacuated back home to Australia and to something I’d taken for granted up until that point – safety.

Sitting on the floor of the airport waiting for our emergency flights, with television cameras filming us and the glow of a burning city in the distance, I didn’t understand the enormity of what I was witnessing, but I knew enough to realise it was something special.

And just a few days later, people power forced a dictator’s resignatio­n and Indonesia took its first tentative steps towards true democracy.

I hold out hope that the Iranian and Chinese protestors have similar success in effecting regime change.

However, it would be naive to expect this will happen easily. Ironically, the more brutal a regime is, the longer it tends to last.

So what can we do, if anything? It’s fantastic to see so many across Australia speaking out in solidarity with the protestors – politician­s, journalist­s, members of the ChineseAus­tralian and Iranian-Australian communitie­s.

Kylie Moore Gilbert, who spent 800 days behind bars in Iran, is calling on the Australian government to do more. We must all continue to use whatever means we have to help.

But, ultimately, it will all come down to the individual courage of those everyday people in China and Iran and their willingnes­s to dig in, stay the distance, and continue the fight. And whatever the outcome, I have no doubt that 80 years from now, we will speak of their bravery in the same revered tones as Ernie Wilson and his fighting Rats.

 ?? ?? Iran supporters wave their national flag bearing the words ‘Woman, Life, Freedom’ at the World Cup in Qatar.
Iran supporters wave their national flag bearing the words ‘Woman, Life, Freedom’ at the World Cup in Qatar.
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