The Guardian Australia

For eight years, Australia has been taking refugees as hostages. It’s time to ask: who has benefited?

- Behrouz Boochani

Eight years have passed since the Australian government mandated offshore detention for all asylum seekers who arrive by boat, which led to the banishing of more than 3,000 refugees to Nauru as well as Manus Island in Papua New Guinea.

Since then, we have heard many tragic stories about the stranded refugees – stories of death, violence, child detention, family separation and countless violations of human rights.

We have heard the stories of the hundreds who have been traumatise­d and the 14 who were killed.We got to know aboutReza Barati who was surrounded by a group of guards and beaten to death. We were told about Hamid Khazaei who developed a leg infection, ended up in a wheelchair and died while in custody. Faysal Ishak Ahmed also died in a Brisbane hospital.

When I think about the stories of these refugees, including myself, the first thought that springs to mind is the abduction of human beings on the sea. We were kidnapped and forcibly transferre­d to an island we had never heard of. We were robbed of our identity. We turned into a string of numbers through a carefully planned process of dehumanisa­tion. We were led into an evil system which was designed to diminish our identity.

The offshore detention policy was a form of official hostage-taking. For years, the Australian government refused to accept us, while preventing us from being transferre­d elsewhere. Even when it succumbed to public pressure by signing a resettleme­nt deal with the United States, the government prolongate­d the transfer process. After all these years, many refugees are still held in indefinite detention.

In addition to being a form of official hostage-taking, the policy provided a platform for the spread of populist ideas and false claims. Kevin Rudd, for example, announced this policy just before the 2013 federal election, while Scott Morrison went to the Christmas Island detention centre alongside a dozen reporters in 2019 and posed heroically against the backdrop of the sea.

They deceivedth­e public into believing that the offshore detention policy was like a building that would collapse if one brick were to be removed from it. They warned against the invasion of boats on Australian shores, but no boats arrived. What boats anyway? They returned every single one to Indonesia.

This is a key point, because whenever the public has put pressure on the government since 2013, officials have highlighte­d the risks of opening up the borders. This turned out to be an outright lie. What the government has done is create unjustifie­d fear while hiding behind the notion of national security.

The reality is they needed our bodies for retaining their political power. Along the way, they created a $12bn detention industry which has greatly benefited politician­s as well as certain security and medical companies. The contracts signed with Paladin is the only instance leaked to the media, but I believe that is just the tip of the iceberg.

The Australian government has made every effort to preserve its detention industry. When thousands of refugees were transferre­d to the US, the government brought in a group of New Zealanders previously held in Australia. At the end of the day, human bodies are fuel to this money-making torture machine.

The offshore detention policy is a combinatio­n of hostage-taking, deception, secrecy, corruption, populist propaganda, and of course, systematic torture. It is sadistic, costly, and unnecessar­y. After all these years, Australian­s need to find the courage to look in the mirror and ask themselves, “What have we gained? What have we lost?” These are crucial questions.

It is time to challenge the foundation­s of this deceitful policy. In the last eight years, human values have been undermined, more than $12bn has been spent and the internatio­nal reputation of Australia has suffered immensely. The key question to ask right now is: “Who has benefited from this policy?”

• Written by Behrouz Boochani, adjunct senior fellow at University of Canterbury

• Translated by Mohsen Kafi, a PhD candidate in literary translatio­n studies at Victoria University of Wellington

The offshore detention policy is a combinatio­n of hostage-taking, deception, secrecy, corruption, populist propaganda and systematic torture

 ??  ?? Kurdish-Iranian born journalist and refugee Behrouz Boochani spent six years in Australian-run detention on Manus Island in Papua New Guinea. He now lives in Christchur­ch, New Zealand. Photograph: Martin Hunter/AAP
Kurdish-Iranian born journalist and refugee Behrouz Boochani spent six years in Australian-run detention on Manus Island in Papua New Guinea. He now lives in Christchur­ch, New Zealand. Photograph: Martin Hunter/AAP

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