For the last five years, the Australian government has been courting disaster in the Manus Island detention camps, and the wider zone of influence on the island. There has already been violent death, negligent death, sexual abuse and institutional violence in the system. Those were bad enough; a larger, more tragic event, an atrocity, has been avoided. The government now seems intent on creating one, under the cover of a supposedly humanitarian transition in the system.
Close to a year and a half ago, the Papua New Guinea Supreme Court ruled that the detention of asylum seekers at the “Foxtrot” camp was illegal under PNG law, and that the government had had no right to make a deal with Australia, dependent on such detention. This was a cause for hope for the detainees and their supporters.
Hope triumphing over bitter experience, as it turned out. In response to the court’s ruling, which should have had the detainees brought to Australian soil, they have been forced out of the camp itself, into either a more open transit centre in another part of the island or into the general Manus Island community. Confusion reigns; the Foxtrot inmates are being passed from limbo into purgatory.
The move leaves them without one thing the Foxtrot regime did provide, a barrier of sorts, in an island society with a certain amount of violence. Now the Foxtrot prisoners are exposed to it, violence both opportunistic and with deeper roots, leaving them with very little security at all.
You can’t help but marvel at the evil intent of this. By obeying the letter of law as regards the PNG court ruling, it has acted against its spirit, which had a view to the men’s (the prisoners are all male) human rights. It’s of a piece with the sleazy amoralism that has become the standard operational procedure of offshore detention over recent years. Inside the centre, they faced brutal treatment from some guards (some of whom have hard-right, anti-immigrant politics), intra-detainee violence and sexual abuse, bad food, poor medical treatment or none at all, boredom and despair.
[Rundle: the tortured moral philosophy of offshore detention]
Outside, they face a populace for whom the camp is simply an alien colonial imposition, only some of whom need to be hostile for them to be in a very dangerous situation indeed. Those who are refusing to leave Foxtrot, and a secondary camp, “Mike”, they were decanted to, have been threatened with a police raid to throw them out. Cruelty, suffering and absurdity, which were once expected byproducts of the regime, have now become their core intent, as a deterrent to others.
But I wonder if the Turnbull government really understands just how dangerous is the situation it is creating in Manus. Hundreds of men have been plonked down in the middle of PNG society, as if they had been put in Glen Waverley or Parramatta or some such, zones of arrival and departure, and public physical space, which is substantially anonymous.
That is not PNG, and anyone with the knowledge necessary to running such a policy should be aware of this. PNG is a modern state ruling over a set of small and distinct societies that remain held together by kinship and claim on place. The state itself is a post-colonial creation from two colonial possessions stitched together; the writ of nationhood barely runs on its mainland, let alone the outlying islands yoked into it, after hundreds or thousands of years of separate existence.
So quite aside from the resentment any society would feel at having a prison camp put down in its midst, there is the specific question of the Foxtrot inmates being put in a place where cannot simply “be”, without being in relation to other groups. The Foxtrot inmates have been put in a society where mutual obligations and regard can be expressed by either reciprocal exchange, or by expressive violence against a collective entity.
This would explain the reported robbery and assault on an Iranian asylum seeker who was cut with a machete by his attackers in a way that appeared, to witnesses, to be intended to have him bleed to death. There seems no doubt that the account is true, and that the violence went far beyond that required to rob the man. Trying to bleed someone out has pretty well-known connotations in this context.
The situation is exacerbated by the possible imbalance between cash-poor locals and the Foxtrot ex-inhabitants, who may get cash-transfer payments. The gender imbalance created by the men’s presence in the region, relationships between the men and some of the local women, and criminal acts by some of the men themselves, have all created a microcosm of 21st-century imperialism.
To all these triggers, add the grand absurdity of all; they are now owed more than $71 million by the Australian government, as compensation for violating their human rights, by exactly the process that keeps them there, surrounded by very poor people who do not want them.
Kevin Rudd has been tweeting furiously, trying to distance himself from the PNG “solution” as it exists now. But he has no excuse. He’s a smart man, well-educated in the humanities. He knows that PNG is something other than Extremely North Brisbane, that it’s not a place people can simply be “settled” in — that the mix of traditional mores, with the traumatic impact of colonisation, and its revival with this new recolonisation, is a recipe for disaster.
But the mooks in the Turnbull government? This is a bunch of law/commerce grads who think the whole world wants nothing more than to put on a cashmere sweater of a Sunday morning, go to brunch, and come back in the Prius, singing along to No Jacket Required. They know fuck all about anything, and I suspect they genuinely do not understand what they have wrought. I’m not trying to let the Turnbull government off the hook here. Many of them have a racist indifference to anyone with brown skin, and without such disdain, the offshore detention system could not function. But, for political self-interest as much as anything, I presume they do not want the situation to deteriorate further.
[Rundle: refugee suicide by fire our new eternal, nihilistic flame]
Yet the least that the ex-Foxtrot inmates face, rehoused in the town, is continued harassment and petty crime. The worst they face is a spiral of affront taken, and collective payback, which quickly spirals into a very bad situation indeed. Anything is now possible. The situation has been underplayed because, with all the structural and procedural violence the Australian state is applying to the Manus Island prisoners, it seems unfair to focus on the threats arising from PNG people, who have also been used and abused by the process. But of course putting them in that situation is part of the process, a double jeopardy.
It will be October before interview for resettlement in the US, as part of the Turnbull-Obama deal, recommence. And Trump and the Republicans are so opposed to that deal that the chances of it being discontinued are high. In the meantime, the strategy appears to be to allow the ex-Foxtrot inmates to be so terrorised in daily life that they voluntarily return to the countries they left.
You’ve summed it up really well Guy.
While the policies of successive Oz Govts towards refugees have reduced me to a mixture of rage and powerlessness, the sheer horror facing those poor bastards on Manus just keeps escalating every day.
I don’t think I’ve ever been more ashamed of my country.
I suppose the ex-Foxtrotters will establish group discipline and set up a perimeter.
And that leaves me, and many like me, with a moral/ethical dilemma, being what can I do when there is nothing I can do that has any effect. And if it has no effect, am I absolved from the responsibility to take whatever flimsy and impotent action that is available to me (letters to the editor, to MP’s, to Dutton – god talk about throwing seed over barren ground)
I don’t know on this one Guy, the sense of impotence is complete, and I am fighting my fellow citizen who are happy for the government to demonise ‘the others’.
Such tossers. And yes, the law/commerce grads know nothing at all. Ignorance is a cashmere sweater, knitted by an 8 year old in the backblocks of Afghanistan and paid just a fraction of full price, what a bargain.
The disconnect is endless.
With apologies to a relative of mine who knows you well Guy, and wishes I would not comment publicly about your articles, this is an excellent summary of the history of Australia’s shame. I, too, am beyond disgusted with what the our Governments, from Rudd onwards, have done to the refugees. There is absolutely no justification for the way they have behaved.
I would suggest you read the human rights reports going back 20 years on this inhuman policy that our racist media all support along with the ALP/LNP racist cartel. It’s always been brutal and depraved from the story of Villawood where young mothers were forced to have abortions, or young mums were bashed by guards.
I have all of the Woomera report files – files of rape, beatings by guards, a three year old left unattended by doctors for 2 days with two broken legs after falling from a dangerous bunk bed, a young boy disabled when a fence fell on him, a 6 year old Iraqi kid left needing heart surgery for 6 months and the hand cuffing of anyone who had to leave the centre even to see the doctor.
The Woomera lawyers worked free and were libelled and abused by Ruddock and co and where were the ALP during all those years CHEERING.
Interesting Marilyn. I wasn’t aware of any of that.
It beggars belief how inhumane Australians have become. I still occasionally meet someone who thinks ‘boat people’ are akin to vermin & deserve the scenario being played out on Manus.
That a Trump regime will offer any glee or hope to our refugees seems farcical. It will only happen if Turnbull (or whoever happens to be PM that week) trades something substantial in return… their soul or several thousand Australian troops for example. Watch the US begin backing off the original agreement any time soon.