The Gold Coast Bulletin

YOU ARE NOT ALONE

Aussies once unjustly detained send messages of solidarity

- David Mills

Believe me when I tell you that there are quite literally millions who are with you in this

Bogus charges from a paranoid regime. The sudden loss of freedom, the fear of an extended prison sentence, and the overriding concern that nobody in the outside world really cares …

Pretty much everything the detained Wall Street Journal reporter Evan Gershkovic­h has been experienci­ng and feeling, four Australian­s know all too well.

Their stories differ – Kylie Moore-Gilbert was imprisoned in Iran for 804 days; economist Sean Turnell was detained in Myanmar for 650 days; reporter Peter Greste was held for 13 months in Egypt; and fellow journalist Cheng Lei spent almost three years in jail in China.

But all four know the horror of being unjustly detained for lengthy periods, and recall the anxiety that diplomatic negotiatio­ns may not be enough to secure their release.

As Gershkovic­h notches up one full year since he was first detained on espionage charges in Moscow – accusation­s fiercely rejected by his lawyers, family and employer – these four Australian­s are reaching out to the 32-yearold reporter with heartfelt messages of hope, as well as advice for surviving the dark days.

They join a growing chorus raising awareness about Gershkovic­h’s plight and the issue of press freedom.

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, Opposition Leader Peter Dutton and a host of sports stars and leading journalist­s have so far responded to News Corp Australia’s Dear Evan campaign with words of encouragem­ent.

“I don’t need to tell you that wrongful imprisonme­nt is a marathon of endurance, albeit one in which a seemingly elusive finish line is always in sight,” wrote Dr Moore-Gilbert.

“As you approach that bitter anniversar­y, one whole year of unjust detention, please know that you are not alone, nor are you forgotten.

“Even on the other side of the world, in places as remote and obscure as southeaste­rn Australia, we are mobilising for you.

“We care about you. This terrible ordeal will come to an end, and I suspect sooner than we might anticipate.”

Professor Sean Turnell’s words were just as powerful.

He exhorted Gershkovic­h to remember his job as a journalist was “noble and good”.

“Free speech matters,” he wrote.

“It really matters. It’s the one thing that will prevent our world falling into the abyss.”

He also passed on some tips about how he time in prison.

“When I didn’t have any books I played memory games,” he said.

“I’d pick a topic, and try to remember all I could about it, assemble it in some sort of order, and carry in my head a narrative. I tried to remember every US president in history in chronologi­cal order, and everything I could think of about them. I’d repeat the exercise day after day.”

Greste shared that a moment of clarity had helped him understand his prison experience.

“I recall how I sometimes spun out in a spiral of anger, bitterness, despair, frustratio­n and loneliness,” he wrote. survived his

Journalist who was jailed in Egypt on trumped-up terrorism charges

Peter Greste

As you approach that bitter anniversar­y – one whole year of unjust detention – please know you are not alone, nor are you forgotten

“It took a long while for me to realise that regardless of the state of the walls and bars that confined us, those emotions – despair, anger, frustratio­n, loneliness, bitterness – did not reside in the concrete or steel.

“They were merely mute elements pressed into service by people who didn’t care a jot about us. Rather, those emotions lived in my own head.

“And the thing that kept me down was not the cell that stopped us from doing our work or the a---holes who had locked us up for political expedience. It was the prison I had built in my mind. It had no external reality.”

The realisatio­n was liberating, Greste said, and while it did not mean his negative emotions vanished, it did mean “I could also see them for what they were”.

“Rather than get sucked into that mind soup, I could let them go and start each day afresh,” he said.

Along with other Australian­s who have been unjustly

Australian academic unjustly imprisoned in Iran

Sean Turnell

Kylie Moore-Gilbert

Evan, you have the love and support, mate, of millions of people around the world. Amongst the cohort of ex-prisoners of conscience, you are revered

Economist who spent 650 days in a Myanmar prison on fabricated charges that he breached the State Secrets Act.

Journalist­s are a tenacious and vociferous bunch with a heightened sense of justice. We will be your voice because they won’t let you speak. We will tell the world that taking someone hostage to extract political leverage is not acceptable

Journalist jailed for three years in China on false allegation­s of sharing Chinese state secrets overseas

Cheng Lei

jailed overseas, Greste, Dr Moore-Gilbert, Professor Turnell and Sky News journalist Cheng Lei have formed the Australian Wrongful and Arbitrary Detention Alliance, a group that will advocate for people in these situations.

“We want more people to know, to care, to help,” Cheng said.

“We will tell the world that taking someone hostage to extract political leverage is not acceptable.”

Readers can add their own voice of support for Gershkovic­h by writing a letter via this masthead’s website, which will be sent to him at Moscow’s Lefortovo prison.

In her letter, Cheng told Gershkovic­h that upon his release, he would see life “in brilliant colour”.

“You will meet people who have also suffered and made meaning out of it,” she said.

“You will have more pathos and clarity. You will give back to the world that fought for your freedom. You will heal.”

 ?? ?? Kylie Moore-Gilbert, Sean Turnell, Cheng Lei and (inset) Peter Greste offer moral support for Evan Gershkovic­h. Picture: NCA NewsWire/Martin Ollman
Kylie Moore-Gilbert, Sean Turnell, Cheng Lei and (inset) Peter Greste offer moral support for Evan Gershkovic­h. Picture: NCA NewsWire/Martin Ollman
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