The Guardian Australia

Qantas and Virgin pressured to refuse to take part in removal of asylum seekers

- Ben Doherty

Qantas and Virgin are facing increasing pressure from unions, advocacy groups and the public to refuse to participat­e in the forced removal of asylum seekers from Australia, as airlines around the world boycott deportatio­ns.

But both of Australia’s major carriers have refused to rule out taking part in future deportatio­ns.

The issue of corporate co-operation in forced removals came to renewed internatio­nal attention last month when Swedish student Elin Ersson refused to sit down on a plane at Gothenburg airport, protesting that an Afghan man was being deported “to hell”. She succeeded, and the man was

removed from the plane.

Similar protests have been staged in Australia, resulting, in some cases, in criminal charges laid against protesters.

In June in the UK, Virgin Atlantic said it would no longer assist the home office in deporting people classed as illegal immigrants, after growing unease over the wrongful removal of members of the Windrush generation to Caribbean countries, despite their status as British citizens.

In the US, airlines including American, Frontier, Southwest and United airlines have refused to carry immigrant children being separated from their families under that country’s new “zero tolerance” border policies. Pilots on Germany’s national carrier, Lufthansa, have repeatedly refused to fly asylum seekers to countries where they may face danger.

The advocacy group the Australasi­an Centre for Corporate Responsibi­lity (ACCR) is meeting with Qantas on Friday and is seeking to make representa­tions to Virgin.

The ACCR is arguing both airlines should refuse to take part in forced deportatio­ns to countries where people might face persecutio­n or danger: most deportatio­ns are to Sri Lanka, Afghanista­n and Vietnam, where persecutio­n of minorities or political dissidents are well-documented.

ACCR says airlines should also boycott transferri­ng asylum seekers and refugees between places of detention onshore and offshore, arguing Australia’s detention regime breaches inter-

national law.

A statement signed by more than 60 representa­tives of business, unions, human rights organisati­ons and academia argues companies have obligation­s to respect human rights, and to ignore internatio­nal legal obligation­s can damage a company’s reputation and risk its financial interests.

“To discharge their responsibi­lity, airlines should not participat­e in deportatio­ns where there is evidence that the fundamenta­l human rights to an adequate legal process have been denied, as well as where there is a real risk of serious, irreparabl­e harm to an individual.”

The statement is signed by, among others, the former human rights commission­er Gillian Triggs, the Booker prize-winning novelist Thomas Keneally, the general secretary of the Internatio­nal Trade Union Confederat­ion, Sharan Burrow, and the president of the ACTU, Michele O’Neill.

“No person should be forcibly removed from Australia into a situation where they face being harmed or killed,” O’Neill told the Guardian. “Airlines must take seriously their responsibi­lity to respect human rights.”

A petition calling on Qantas to refuse to participat­e in the “involuntar­y removal” of married Tamil asylum seekers Priya and Nades and their two Queensland-born daughters has attracted more than 13,000 signatures.

“In the past, Qantas has carried out transfers within Australia of asylum seekers about to be deported to danger,” Refugee Action Collective spokesman Chris Breen said. “Asylum seekers deported to Sri Lanka have been imprisoned and tortured.

“A UN report last year described the use of torture in Sri Lanka as ‘routine’. Catholic asylum seekers deported to Vietnam have been harassed, beaten and jailed – despite assurances given to the Australian government. Qantas is an iconic Australian airline that should not be participat­ing in human rights abuses.”

But the Australian government also regularly uses charter flights – at a cost of upwards of $100,000 a flight - to move asylum seekers. The last deportatio­n of Sri Lankan asylum seekers back to Colombo took place on a charter flight.

A spokesman for Qantas told the Guardian: “We appreciate that this is a sensitive issue.

“The government and courts are best placed to make decisions on complex immigratio­n matters, not airlines.”

A spokesman for Virgin Australia said the airline “works with a number of government organisati­ons to transport passengers for a range of reasons”.

“Virgin Australia complies with Australian immigratio­n law and will continue to take advice on this matter from the relevant authoritie­s.”

 ?? Photograph: Bloomberg via Getty Images ?? Advocates say airlines such as Virgin and Qantas should also boycott transferri­ng asylumseek­ers and refugees between places of detention onshore and offshore.
Photograph: Bloomberg via Getty Images Advocates say airlines such as Virgin and Qantas should also boycott transferri­ng asylumseek­ers and refugees between places of detention onshore and offshore.

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