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Asylum seekers – Filef Australia
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News & Events

Thousands of refugees to be guaranteed permanent visas

ABC News

Thousands of refugees to be granted permanent visas as Labor moves to fulfil election promise

By political reporter Nour Haydar  12th February, 2023

 

Thousands of refugees across Australia who have lived “in limbo” for years will be eligible to stay in the country permanently as Labor moves to enact its pre-election commitment.

From Monday, around 19,000 refugees who arrived in Australia before Operation Sovereign Borders started in 2013 will be able to apply to transition to a permanent Resolution of Status (RoS) visa.

The move affects people who hold Temporary Protection Visas (TPV) and Safe Haven Enterprise Visas (SHEV) which Labor promised to abolish at the last election and have been described as cruel by human rights groups.

Those granted a new visa will have the same rights and benefits as all other permanent residents, and will be immediately eligible for social security payments, access to the NDIS and higher education assistance.

They will also be permitted to apply to become citizens once they meet the necessary citizenship requirements and will be able to sponsor family members to come to Australia.

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News & Events

WEBINAR: The politicisation of seeking asylum


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Manus Prison theory and Australia’s response to asylum seekers

Asylum seekers have occupied a particular place in the Australian national imaginary, particularly in the post-Tampa era after 2001. Over that time, successive Australian governments have pursued a militarised enforcement approach to national borders when it comes to people seeking asylum. This includes the implementation of ‘Operation Sovereign Borders’ – the consolidation of a mandatory offshore detention and processing policy fo

r anyone seeking asylum who arrives by boat and the controversial and dangerous ‘tow-back policy’. There has been a range of policy and legislative changes that have made seeking asylum in Australian more difficult, such as indefinite processing times, denying access to family reunion and government-funded legal assistance, and removing the right to independent reviews of refugee claims, among others. There are also operations that systematically censor information regarding asylum seekers – restricting media access to detention facilities, controlling information flows, and leveraging positions of power to manage the narrative. The most controversial and intractable has been the offshoring of immigration of detention to the countries of Nauru and Papua New Guinea (Manus Island). The symposium will be informed by the Manus Prison theory that has been further developed by the analysis of former Manus detainee Behrouz Boochani and his translator and collaborator, Omid Tofighian.

This interdisciplinary symposium will therefore take an overtly political and innovative conceptual approach to this problem. Honouring, applying and extending the legacy of Behrouz and Omid’s work on Manus Prison theory, the symposium will highlight a body of work that seeks to examine these systems and structures so as to better understand how seeking asylum has been politicised in the Australian context, and what impact this has on Australian society more broadly.

ALL WELCOME

FREE EVENT
Online seminar
Wednesday October 28, 2020 10am-1pm (AEST, Sydney)

Register at Eventbrite: https://politicsseekasylum.eventbrite.com.au

KEYNOTE SPEAKER

Alison Mountz, Wilfrid Laurier University

SPEAKERS

Behrouz Boochani, Ngi Tahu Research Centre, Canterbury University/UNSW

Omid Tofighian, UNSW/University of Sydney

Claire Loughnan, University of Melbourne

Andrew Burridge, Macquarie University

Anne McNevin, The New School

Maria Giannacopoulos, Flinders University

Julie Macken, Western Sydney University

PANELLISTS
Claudia Tazreiter (Facilitator), University of New South Wales (UNSW)

Philomena Murray, University of Melbourne

Anthea Vogl, University of Technology Sydney (UTS)

Linda Briskman, Western Sydney University

CONVENORS
Rachel Sharples, Western Sydney University   r.sharples@westernsydney.edu.au

Linda Briskman,Western Sydney University   l.briskman@westernsydney.edu.au

Categories
News & Events

AGAINST OUR OATH The ethical conflicts for doctors working with refugees and asylum seekers


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Thursday 27 February 2020, 6:00-8:00pm

Studio 4, Italian Forum Cultural Centre,  Piazza Level – 23 Norton Street Leichhardt

 

Against Our Oath

The ethical conflicts for doctors working with refugees and asylum seekers

FILEF invites you to a screening of a documentary feature film on doctors working with asylum seekers who arrived in Australia by boat and are de- tained on the remote Pacific islands of Manus and Nauru. Ethical conflicts erupt as the Australian government overrides the clinical decisions made for refugee patients. If doctors cannot follow their medical ethics what will happen to their patients?

Filmed over four years by journalist, Heather Kirkpatrick, 2013 Walkley Award finalist and the winner of a 2014 United Nations Media Peace Prize.

This documentary gets behind the hospital doors to hear from clinicians themselves, who face enormous political pressure, as they cannot always act in their patient’s best interest. Doctors become morally torn as they know they must never abandon their patients and the ethics upon which their medical profession was founded.

Speakers

Dr Elisabeth Biok, phd, Solicitor at the Legal aid Commission, expert on refugee Law in the asia pacific region will give a brief introduction to the current situation, how limiting it is, the government’s refusal to consider positive amendments to the legislation.

Dr. Anne Noonan (MD rome), member of the Medical association for the prevention of War (MapW), psychiatrist, works in remote communities in Central australia.

Q&A will follow. –

Light Refreshments on arrival – Entry by donation

RSVP filefsydney@gmail.com / EventBrite
Follow us on Filef Sydney FBook and Website and subscribe for email updates: filefsydney@gmail.com

 

Categories
Archive Info Evenings

Against Our Oath

27 February 2020

Against Our Oath

Filmed over four years by journalist, Heather Kirkpatrick, 2013 Walkley Award finalist and the winner of a 2014 United Nations Media Peace Prize.

Screening of a documentary feature film on doctors working with asylum seekers who arrived in Australia by boat and are detained on the remote Pacific islands of Manus and Nauru. Ethical conflicts erupt as the Australian government overrides the clinical decisions made for refugee patients. If doctors cannot follow their medical ethics what will happen to their patients?

See Trailer 

Categories
News & Events

Five years too long: Evacuate Manus and Nauru! 21 July at 13:00–15:00 Sydney Town Hall

Hosted by Refugee Action Coalition Sydney RAC

This July marks five years on Manus and Nauru for refugees dumped there by the Australian government.

The situation remains urgent. On 15 June, Fariborz became the 12th person to die as a result of offshore detention. He had warned repeatedly of his declining mental health, but never received the help he needed.

There are 1600 refugees and asylum seekers still stranded on the islands. Around half of all those on Manus and Nauru are blocked from the US by Trump’s travel ban. Iranian, Somali, Sudanese and Iraqi refugees are all being refused resettlement.

The more the election approaches, the more Peter Dutton and Malcolm Turnbull are trying to beat up fear about refugees in the hope of winning votes. Yet they still trail badly in the polls.

The outrage in the US over Donald Trump’s separation of immigrant and refugee families at the border shows that racist policies can be fought. Trump has been forced to back down and promise to keep families together.

Australia also separates refugee families between Australia, and Nauru and Manus Island. And there are still children in detention on Nauru.

There is now majority support for bringing the refugees off the two offshore prison islands. Yet Labor’s Bill Shorten also refuses to adopt the only solution that could get them to safety—to #BringThemHere.

Until all the refugees and asylum seekers are brought to Australia, we have to keep fighting to close Manus Island and Nauru.

Facebook

Categories
News & Events

Nauru burning: An uprising and it’s aftermath. A night with refugee advocate and author Mark Isaacs.

THURSDAY 30TH NOVEMBER 6.30PM
WAVERLY LIBRARY THEATRETTE 32-48 DENISON ST
BONDI JUNCTION
RSVP: http://bit.ly/MarkIsaacs

#BRINGTHEMHERE

Mark Isaacs will present on his Nauru experience, and the real story of offshore detention, including moving and disturbing narratives of asylum seeker torment.

Hosted by Amnesty International Australia Eastern Suburbs and the NSW Refugee Network

Categories
News & Events

ASYLUM SEEKERS AND REFUGEES: we can make a difference FRIDAY 26 MAY 6:30pm


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Australia contravenes international laws by keeping more than 2,000 refugees and asylum seekers languishing in camps in Nauru and Manus Island. More than 1,300 are detained in Australia. Almost 25,000 live on temporary bridging visas in the community, with no certainty of a future in Australia.

Filef and Valerio Daniel De Simoni Association invite you to an information evening with representatives of organizations active in various ways to support refugees trying to seek asylum in Australia.

Participating organizations include:

Amnesty International   Refugee Action Coalition   People Just like Us
Mums 4 Refugees   Grandmothers Against Detention of Refugee Children   One step  Valerio Daniel De Simoni Association

Q&A and light refreshments will follow Entry by donation

RSVP

filefsydney@gmail.com / TryBooking
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