SafeCom: Taylor's Report is a Grave Indictment
Media Release
Tuesday November 3, 2009 7:00am
WST
For immediate Release
"The Report of a visit to
eleven places of detention in Indonesia, just released by
lawyer and advocate Jessie Taylor - even in the context that
some claims have been expressed by several other advocates
since 2003 - stands as a clear and grave series of
indictments against organisations and countries that are
mandated to uphold the highest standards of human rights
standards in the region," WA Human Rights group Project
SafeCom said this morning.
** The Report, "Behind
Australian Doors: Examining the Conditions of Detention of
Asylum Seekers in Indonesia", is available for download
from:
http://www.law.monash.edu.au/castancentre/news/behind-australian-doors-report.pdf
"We
cannot do otherwise than point the finger of this indictment
fairly and squarely at the following - and in this ranking
of order as placed: (1) the United Nations High
Commissioner for Refugees in Indonesia, (2) the
International Organisation for Migration (IOM) in Indonesia,
(3) Australia as the only country that has signed the
Refugee Convention and that funds operations of IOM and
UNHCR in Indonesia, and (4) Indonesia - as a country that
has an intent to become a signatory to the UN Refugee
Convention and that strives to advance further in signing
and ratifying other International Conventions," spokesman
Jack H Smit said.
"The office of UNHCR in
Jakarta:
No complaint about 'understaffing' holds for
the organisation that sets for the entire world the highest
standard of care and respect for refugees and asylum. UNHCR,
going by this report, has failed to fully hear the stories
of asylum seekers; it has dropped the best standard for the
use of interpreters, swapping it for a seriously inferior
service; it has dumped its own understaffing problems on
refugees, whose case assessments have been endangered beyond
acceptable levels."
"Project SafeCom dissents in the
context of the current debacle with Taylor's Recommendation
in the Report to increase funding for UNHCR so the backlog
of assessments can take place in the Jakarta Office. Taylor
clearly shows that UNHCR in Jakarta cannot be trusted to do
the right thing, and Australia, as the only country that has
signed the UN Convention, needs to step into the breech and
send a rescue mission to Indonesia so the asylum seekers and
registered refugees can be flown to
Australia."
"Australia takes 180,000 migrants per
year, and there will be none to little impact on our
population if we show what we ought to show in the region by
taking a few thousands refugees off the total annual migrant
intake quota, starting immediately."
"Secondly, IOM,
the United Nations' "international work horse", has shown in
Indonesia to have a callous disregard for the sanctity of
asylum, and it has developed a corruption of its own sacred
mandate, that was formulated to function as a corrolary to
the UN Convention for the Status of Refugees, and it should
be decisively kicked off to one side, so the way to safety
can be opened for the thousands who are in effect being
tortured in Indonesia," Mr Smit said.
"Thirdly,
Australia is gravely indicted in this enormous human drama,
because, regardless of all the spin and niceties around the
"Bali Process" and "Lombok Treaty" of regional cooperation,
Australia has brazenly allowed this situation to develop in
Indonesia, and happily so, because it kept the asylum
seekers away from itself. The miserly Annual Resettlement
quotas cited by Taylor are the clearest indicator of the
callousness of Australia towards the plight of those stuck
in
Indonesia."
ENDS