THE STATE I'M IN

Showing posts with label Australia - Refugee. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Australia - Refugee. Show all posts

It's tough for refugees in Wyndham Vale, Vic.

11th November 2008
Star News
MASUD Majur knows what it is like to be on the receiving end of racial hatred. With his wife and eight children, Mr Majur has had rocks thrown through the windows of his Wyndham Vale home.

“They were not just from teenagers, but adults as well,” Mr Majur told the Star ...

“When we came here we were very isolated. I feel sad when I say hi to someone and I get no response,” he said...
The rest of the article is the same old: housing shortage, refugees can't get jobs, they have to retrain and can't afford it. And, despite all that, y'all can still afford to have 8 kids each?

Northern Rivers, NSW, a refugee sanctuary

Welcome to Sanctuary Northern Rivers! Sanctuary Northern Rivers Inc. is a community based group situation in the northern rivers region of NSW. Lismore is our home base, with many of our supporters from towns and supporters from the surrounding towns and communities.

It has been our privilege since 2003 to represent the aspiration of our community in supporting refugees. The main effort of our endeavours has been to assist refugees gain a humanitarian visa in order that they may find a home where security and harmony and peace provides them with a new hope for their future. Indeed, it has been an honour to walk with these refugees in along this road...

Sanctuary Northern Rivers was established to bring refugees to Lismore and depends on volunteers from the community. About half the national annual intake of 13,000 refugees must be sponsored, which means that the sponsoring organisation pays the refugees’ airfare and assists with their resettlement into the community.

Sanctuary Northern Rivers, founded by Dr Michael Douglas, has helped relocate about 100 Sudanese refugees.

Here are some new faces that Michael Douglas and associates have brought to the Northern Rivers.

What about a white sanctuary for people who don't want to live in diversity? Will whites get any native title?

Jobs an issue for Sudanese, Latrobe Valley

21/08/2008
"They said they are facing some employment problems but they wanted to learn firefighting techniques so that they can join the CFA and actually be part of the community.'' ...

"Employment is a real issue and they are trying to find a job that would be good for them but they are happy with the education and recreational opportunities in the community that they get here in the Latrobe Valley,'' Mr Buckley said.
Don't we have labour shortage across the rural sector? Or is this a case of employers preferring whites?

Scores of pilgrims apply to stay as WYD visas near end

August 22, 2008
THE Department of Immigration has been flooded with 85 applications from World Youth Day pilgrims seeking to remain in Australia -- and that number is predicted to rise.

The pilgrims are from Africa, Asia and the Middle East...

Victorian Refugee and Immigration Legal Centre ... was providing advice to a number of pilgrims who had suffered brutality and torture in their home countries.

Refugees need University's support, VIC

15 August 2008
A landmark report by Victoria University’s (VU) Institute for Community, Ethnicity and Policy Alternatives (ICEPA) offers a best practice model for the tertiary education and training sector to improve access for refugees.

Report co-author and ICEPA Director, Associate Professor Danny Ben-Moshe, said the report calls for a systematic approach to educational service provision to help refugee students overcome the major barriers they face when seeking access to TAFE and Higher Education...

The best practice model recommended by the report includes:

* fee relief (most refugees say they cannot participate in education without this),
* support with transport (particularly in rural and regional areas),
* waver of materials costs,
* the provision of role models and mentors (ideally other refugees who have now settled and can appreciate the experience of new arrivals) and,
* understanding of, and assistance with, the diverse child-care needs of refugees.

Ben-Moshe said: “Refugee student needs have to be addressed holistically rather than just their educational needs. If the students are to achieve their educational outcomes institutions have to take into account their socio-economic and cultural circumstance and provide general life education services beyond the usual remit of an education provider.

“Educational institutions need to change the way they think and take on board the broader needs of the refugees, such as housing and child care. They can do this by having a liaison officer that works with the refugees and external bodies such as service providers...

“A program of cross-cultural training should also be implemented for TAFE and Higher Education teachers and other staff such as librarians, to inform them of the needs of refugees and appropriate responses.”
And some rose petals too?

Shift on illegals sends wrong message

August 11, 2008
Ross Fitzgerald
Being able to stay within the Australian community as an asylum-seeker surely increases the propensity and possibility of people absconding, making it difficult to track or locate them.

Knowing this, people smugglers could well use this new situation to encourage prospects who aren't genuine refugees to attempt to enter Australia.

The opportunity for potential illegals to live within our wider community until their cases were resolved could have unintended negative consequences. For example, some of those arriving here knowing they are unlikely to meet the legal requirements to remain would almost certainly be encouraged to "disappear" within Australia.

Refugees get lowdown on health services

August 9, 2008
Brisbane's QEII Hospital opened its doors to more than 700 refugees and other immigrants to deepen their understanding of the state's basic health services.

Queensland's second Multicultural Health Festival drew people from about 170 different cultural backgrounds, said coordinator Fazil Rostam...

"It's not just about subsidising (health services) or making them free. It's about making them culturally appropriate, with good access to language interpreters," Mr Bricknall said...

Queensland Health Minister Stephen Robertson said that with more than 270 languages spoken in Queensland, the government had set up a multicultural action plan.
Cultural awareness will just make more nurses leave. Translation services is money down the drain.

More rights for asylum-seekers

July 31, 2008
ASYLUM-SEEKERS will be refused the dole but given greater rights to work and access to Medicare while they wait for their cases to be resolved...

... the 2008-09 budget provided $5.6 million to continue the case management and community care pilot program to help people whose claims are being resolved. The program provides practical support for health and welfare needs, offers immigration information and counselling on options for return to home country and also provides independent migration advice.

This includes short-term accommodation, basic living allowance payments and medical health checks...

The Opposition's immigration spokesman, Chris Ellison, warned that the changes could allow hundreds of non-citizens to disappear into the community and provide encouragement to people smugglers.

Don't create failures at HSC, principals warn

8/08/2008
UP to 15 per cent of students would fail to gain a higher school certificate and be branded as failures if minimum standards of literacy and numeracy were introduced for year 12 students, NSW high school principals say...

Dorothy Hoddinott, the principal of Holroyd High School, which has many refugee students, said she saw no point in having benchmarking tests in year 12. "It is closing the gate after the horse has bolted," she said.

... She said refugee children often improved their English literacy as they moved through TAFE or university.

"The aim is not to have a totally alienated underclass in society," she said. "The aim is to increase the education levels for everybody."
Don't disturb the delicate immigrant.

Most think refugee level is too high

August 5, 2008
A MAJORITY of Australians think the country is taking too many refugees, according to an Essential Research poll...

In the online poll of 1013, people were asked about the increase in Australia's refugee intake to 13,500 annually: 52% said this was too large; a quarter said it was about right; and 6% said it was too small.

New immigration laws flop with Australians

4/08/2008
A new poll has cast doubt over the popularity of the Government's softer immigration laws, with less than a quarter of Australians believing they were too tough in the first place.

The Federal government scaled back Australia's immigration laws just last week so asylum seekers and visa-overstays will only be detained if they pose a risk to the community.

Resettled Iraqis left feeling dumped

August 5, 2008
IRAQI interpreters given asylum in Australia after working alongside Australian troops during the occupation of their country say they feel short-changed by the Federal Government since arriving in Australia two months ago.

The interpreters, who faced persecution in Iraq and were branded traitors by many of their countrymen, feel they have been dumped in Australia with little help or prospect of work.

They say they were promised jobs, immediate health care and moderately priced housing...

"In Iraq we worked together. Here they don't seem to want to know us."
Read it all. Some of them are going home. Seems their lives are not in that much danger after all.

Fate of asylum seekers may depend on a judge's gender

August 5, 2008
WINNING asylum is like a game of roulette, but the chips will be in your favour if you have legal representation and a judge who is a woman or has not worked in the immigration bureaucracy, a study of US asylum decisions has found.

Beyond the initial issue of the asylum seeker's credibility, these factors have a huge impact on whether a person will be granted asylum. An Australian law specialist said a study of asylum decisions in Australia would probably yield similar biases.
In other words, neither judge has a clue. So your safety and security is a lottery.

More support sought for Wagga refugees, NSW

Aug 04, 2008
The Opposition's Parliamentary Secretary for Immigration and Citizenship, Louise Markus, met representatives of Wagga Wagga's African community at the end of last week.

Mrs Markus says there is an obvious need for more funding.

"There's one-and-a-half caseworkers for 300 clients and obviously the funding at this point of time is insufficient, so you would need to increase the level of funding in some cases to be able to provide that," she said.

New migrants and refugees are not given a 'fair go'

August 03, 2008
THEY'VE come to Queensland to start a new life, in most cases escaping poverty and persecution in the search for a safe environment for their families.

Many are skilled and highly educated, but their qualifications often are not recognised in their adopted country and they must start all over again – attending school or working in much more menial jobs.

Now these new migrant and refugee families are being forced out of the cities – and away from the very services and community networks they need – by the housing crisis and the rising cost of living.

Families are being split, parents are struggling to get to jobs and TAFE language courses, and children are missing vital English classes. The result, community leaders say, is high unemployment and increased cases of depression, crime and school truancy.

The state and federal governments admit the state's poorest suburbs will come under intense pressure, posing serious social problems with no simple solution.
All these problems: no housing, no recognition of qualifications, language barrier, employers not giving them a go. No simple solution? If Australia doesn't have the capacity or desire to accommodate immigrants then there is an obvious solution: stop immigration. But that would make us look like we're discriminating, and we can't have that, can we? In the absence of ability to absorb, immigration is the cause all these problems.

More money for displaced Iraqis

July 28, 2008
Senator Evans announced last week that Australia would spend an extra $6.45 million on international aid projects to ease the plight of refugees who have fled war and persecution in their home countries. This brings the Government's overall commitment to more than $16 million in 2008-09.

Part of the money will be used to help Iraqi women in Syria who fled sexual violence.

Refugee intake raised to 13,500

May 14, 2008
Immigration Minister Chris Evans said Australia would increase the size of its humanitarian program to 13,500 in 2008-09. Just under half of those places - 6500 - would be for offshore refugees with a special emphasis on refugees from Africa, Asia and the Middle East. The special humanitarian program would be increased by 750 places to 7750 over 2009-10.

As anticipated, the Government announced it would scrap temporary protection visas, instead issuing permanent visas as of early 2008-09.

Country life signals end of a long struggle

July 30, 2008
The 34-year-old Afghan refugee who fled Taliban vengeance said yesterday: "They were three wasted years. Wasted time and wasted life."...

His youngest child, Javid, was born after he fled and he only saw him for the first time aged five when his family was reunited two years ago.

The Castlemaine branch of Rural Australians for Refugees helped Mr Hashimi get through that period, and encouraged him to settle in Castlemaine on his release. He threw himself into the community's life, joining its a capella choir...

His wife is learning English and his three sons and daughter are earning glowing reports at school. He laments that if not for those years on Nauru, their schooling would be further advanced.
So much for rural life being a haven for whites.

A ‘modern risk management approach’ to refugees

July 30th, 2008
The rights of the illegal immigrant will be placed ahead of the right that ordinary Australians have to feel protected in their own country. This is a bad signal to be sending out to the rest of the world, let alone legislating for the Australian people. It is exacerbated by the government saying it will only detaining people “as a last resort”.

The minister for immigration recently said that “The debate about temporary migration, quite frankly, is over”, even as more Australians wake up to the problems of sustained mass immigration. Having reduced our immigration standards the same minister now wants to weaken our asylum policy by introducing a risk-based approach to detention.

In a time when Europe and the Unites States are grappling with ways to contain illegal immigration, now is not the time for the minister to be watering down our immigration and asylum systems and steering Australia closer to their failed policies.

End to mandatory detention

July 29, 2008
HUNDREDS of detainees could be released into the community under radical changes to Australia's mandatory detention policy to be announced today.

Under the changes, only people who pose a risk to the community will be detained, The Age understands. Others will be released into the community while their cases are assessed.