Up to 1000 Afghan translators and support staff who helped Australian troops during the war face a devastating future as Western forces withdraw later this year. With the country on the brink of chaos ahead of the Western withdrawal, and with the Taliban already surging, translators and other staff have targets on their backs.
But just days after Britain announced a new plan to accelerate the repatriation of Afghan staff following the withdrawal, Foreign Minister Marise Payne confirmed at Senate estimates that there was no new approach from Australia to bring locally engaged employees in Afghanistan here. Now, the Morrison government is under fire for not doing enough to assure their safe resettlement in Australia.
A moral obligation
Australian troops and diplomatic staff would be lost in Afghanistan without the help of local staff. They’re the interpreters, fixers and guards who work with Australian forces at incredible personal risk.
For Labor’s foreign affairs spokesperson Penny Wong, ensuring Afghan translators were resettled was the right thing to do.
“These are friends of Australia and I think they deserve to be treated better than they have been thus far,” she said at Senate estimates.
Greens immigration spokesperson Nick McKim said visas should be provided to all locally engaged staff who requested it.
“People who have risked their personal safety on behalf of this government should be offered protection by this government. It is the very least we can do,” he told Crikey.
But the actual process for settling these staff is as cumbersome and bureaucratic as the situation in Afghanistan is volatile and dangerous.
Hugh Jeffrey, a defence first assistant secretary, explained to estimates that Australia would simply continue to process locally engaged employees as it always had. Under the current plan, some 600 Afghan staff, out of 1000 applicants, have settled in Australia since 2013. Add on their families and you get 1200.
Payne said the decision to grant the visas was a matter for Home Affairs, with the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade, and Defence, both involved with the assessment. That’s three different Canberra-based departments handling applications from Afghanistan. And Australia just closed its embassy in Kabul.
Refugee Council of Australia vice-president William Maley, who is an international relations professor at the Australian National University, told Crikey that in a situation like this, “red tape tends to be fatal”.
“When one has a whole stack of elaborate procedures including security checks in Canberra, there’s a high likelihood that those in greatest danger will get caught,” he said.
Payne, meanwhile, wouldn’t even commit to a number of people the government hope to resettle.
“That will depend on the number of applications and eligibility is determined under the regulations I referred to before,” she said.
Bureaucratic malaise
The problem with Australia relying on the same process to resettle Afghan employees is that, thus far, the process has been a mess. When the government announced its decision to close the embassy, security guards were initially told they wouldn’t be eligible for resettlement. A quick about-face followed.
Application forms are long, confusing and in English. There is also a shortage of forms. And according to Jason Scanes, an Afghanistan veteran and campaigner for better protection for locally engaged employees, some interpreters have had to wait as long as seven years to get their applications processed.
The government has resettled 1200 people in eight years under the Locally Engaged Employees visa program. It needs to resettle almost that many as soon as possible, with allied troops set to leave by September. Scanes says unless interpreters and guards leave Afghanistan by then, they may never get safely to Australia.
“If they’re left there [in Afghanistan] when the last Coalition troops leave, unless they’re taken to a third country to concurrently have their visa application assessed, they won’t have an opportunity to leave.”
Other Coalition partners, such as the UK and US, seem to be making an effort. Australia, meanwhile, seems to lack the required will.
“It’s a serious mistake to chug along at normal pace,” Maley said.
According to Scanes, the decision to abandon Afghan staff will be deeply felt among veterans, whose relationship with the government and civilian institutions is already strained after a long, increasingly-tainted war.
“These people are a big part of what keeps us safe as soldiers when we commit our forces overseas,” he said.
“The veteran group will feel a great deal of shame, and a lot of damage done to Australia’s reputation abroad if we abandon them.”
I assume coalition thinking runs along the lines of…
Better a thousand legitimate interpreters and other support staff and their families be slaughtered by the Taliban, than one undeserving queue jumper be allowed to sneak in to Centrelink.
If they were Pentecostals, they’d be here already – so long as they promised to vote for Scummo.
….. Maybe if they were “colour coded”?
Or South African Boers.
Or they could register as “French au pairs”?
I wonder, could they claim to know someone connected to AFL….
….. Donate to the Coalition/Liberal Party?
So may ways to rort a system – if they were of “the right’s stuff”.
The more this government remains in power, the more I absolutely detest them – they seriously are scumbags of the highest order. You have a PM who’s ideal society is for everyone to be a Pentacostal. You have Dutton and Marise Payne who seem to have their own agendas of hate. Their treatment of the unemployed, aged and disabled is out and out woeful, and approaching criminal in neglect. You have blokes masturbating over desks, alleged rapes, assaults and god knows what else that’s been kept secret. You have soldiers allegedly committing war crimes, and again, another attempted cover up by the government. The secrecy is increasing, under the guise of “national security”, even though, we know full well, “national security” is used as an excuse to bump up laws and punishments. They deliberately withhold funding from the NDIS to make their figures look good … and subsequently they’re happy for people to suffer so they look good. In addition, they make it harder to get NDIS funding approved, deliberately making the process very hard instead of a breeze. What the hell is going on ? I didn’t vote them in, and will be trying as hard as I can to vote them out. This is my opinion of course, but I’m sure a lot of people agree with me !!
That about covers it Markh 11. The Australian national image internationally is kaput! God help all those Afganhi who placed their lives at horrendous risk to support our people . . . and now abandoned. Utterly, utterly disgusting Morrison Government.
As long as you have nut jobs that are god bothers aka Hillsobg and ScuMo’s followers then the numbers are stacked, as long as you have Mudracker and his sad excuse for journalistic editorials ( and i include the fools on Sky) then he is untouchable.
As long as Labor remains as insipid as it is then there is nothing in the offing!
I can hear the pentecostals singing: “Shall we gather at the bank vault, where whit angel feet have trod..odd…”
White angel feet, not one whit of hope for my typing.
Got it anyway.
Senator Payne informs us that proper procedures are being followed. What a pity she didn’t tell Morrison, Dutton, Taylor, Joyce, Laming, and Bridget that proper procedures need to be followed. Had they been, then we mightn’t have Water rorts, Sport rorts, Community Funding rorts and all the rest of the rorts carried on by members of this corrupt government.
Does that woman have any foresight or compassion?
Does that woman have any foresight or compassion?
She’s a Liberal, so obviously no. If you have foresight or compassion, you don’t join the party of greed and selfishness in the first place.. And if by some quirk of fate she did have, Scummo wouldn’t have made her a minister anyway
Not an unexpected response from a “Government” that abandons Australian citizens overseas in a pandemic.
Very accurate!
Two expressions you don’t normally hear these days – Australian Government and Moral Obligation.
Oh yes, you hear them but in an adversarial sense.
Let this be a lesson to all those locals who might consider supporting Australia in any future conflict – this is a shameful government but then again why am I not surprised! I wonder if the ASPI and the IPA and Messrs. Dutton and Hastie and Paterson and Wilson et al have ‘intelligence’ that these Locally Engaged staff in Kabul are in fact spies for Beijing – after all everyone else is. It is to be hoped that any of them that are allowed in will be made swear allegiance to Eric Abetz
To who?
Had to guffaw! Yes, those peskie Chinese are everywhere!
As in the Australian government has a moral obligation to take from the powerless, and give to their rich mates, you mean?