Australia needs a moral revolution

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By Behrouz Boochani

How can a nation look to the future when its leaders cage little children for years, in a remote and forlorn prison?

Five years ago, on a boiling hot day, Australian immigration minister Scott Morrison [prime minister since 24 August] entered Manus Prison. A number of refugees who represented various groups were invited to meet with him. In that meeting, the refugee representatives found themselves being threatened – Morrison pointed his finger at them and yelled: “You have no chance of coming to Australia and you must return to your countries.” I depict this exact scene and its aftermath in my book No Friend but the Mountains: Writing From Manus Prison.

It was a time when few people had heard of the prisons on Manus Island (Papua New Guinea) and (Pacific island) Nauru. The refugees felt isolated and forgotten, the refugees felt extreme pressure. It was in this context that the refugees were confronted with that single threatening line by Morrison. That sentence conjured up a wave of hopelessness, so much so that a few people attempted suicide.

His despicable behaviour was also subject to serious criticism from the prison authorities. For days the situation was out of control. Actually, the circumstances created by this event eventually led to a riot in February 2014 – it led to the killing of Reza Barati. It also resulted in hundreds of refugees suffering serious injuries.

(Behrouz Boohani is a journalist and an Iranian refugee currently held in an Australian prison camp on Manus Island, Papua New Guinea. Translation by Omid Tofighian, American University in Cairo/University of Sydney.)

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