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SIEVX-NEWS: DEGREES OF HELL

owner-sievx-news
Sun, 13 Jul 2003 17:56:28 -0700

DEGREES OF HELL
14 July 2003
by Marg Hutton & Tony Kevin

[a hyperlinked version of this article is online at http://sievx.com
and http://sievx.com/archives/2003_07-08/20030714.shtml ]


In view of the recent press coverage concerning Sondos Ismail's 
family we decided to research what is already on the public record 
about the visa situation of all the SIEVX survivor families that we 
understand to be living in Australia. We have not sought to intrude 
in people's personal affairs.

Seven survivors from five families are now understood to be living in 
Australia. Their circumstances vary and it could be argued that some 
are better off in a visa sense than others.

However, talking about 'better off' in these circumstances is a 
nonsense - because all of the SIEVX survivor families hold different 
classes of Temporary Protection Visas (TPVs) which, precisely because 
these visas offer only 'Temporary Protection', leave the families in 
varying degrees of hell.

It appears that the seven survivors living here are all on subclass 
XB451 Secondary Movement Relocation (Temporary) visas.

According to DIMIA:

'The subclass XB451 visa is an offshore temporary visa for persons 
who:

* are outside their home country, 
* have left their country of first asylum; 
* are currently residing in a country other than their home country 
or country of first asylum ; 
* have not entered Australia; 
* are not an offshore entry person; and 
* are subject to persecution or substantial discrimination in their 
home country, or a female registered as being of concern to UNHCR.

The subclass XB451 visa is a five year visa which enables a person to 
obtain a permanent protection visa after four and a half years IF 
THERE IS A CONTINUING NEED FOR PROTECTION' [emphasis added].

Although not listed as a criterion a spokesman for DIMIA was quoted 
in a newspaper last year as stating that: 'survivors of the sinking 
would [only] be accepted into Australia if they had proven family 
links'. Presumably this means family links to people whose residency 
in Australia is secure. But as we understand it, all of the survivors 
living in Australia except the orphaned Zaynab Alrimahi have been 
reunited with family in Australia who themselves are only on three 
year temporary protection visas. (Zaynab's uncle and aunt arrived in 
1995 and have since been granted Australian citizenship).

According to Philip Ruddock, the rules governing TPVs were changed in 
September 2001 'to give the least advantageous outcome to [people] 
who seek to enter Australia without authority... If [someone] come[s] 
to Australia or one of our territories or are processed in one of the 
offshore processing centres, Nauru or Manus Island, they can only get 
a three year temporary protection visa and that will be for life. In 
other words, at any time, when they're found no longer to need 
protection they can be returned home.'

This means that most of the SIEVX survivors now in Australia are in 
slightly better visa circumstances than those of their immediate 
family with whom they were reunited. But they are still under the 
threat of eventual forced return if the Minister decides at the time 
their XB451 visa expires that they no longer have 'a continuing need 
for protection' in Australia. And, given the interdependence of the 
survivors and their families in Australia, a threat to one is a 
threat to all in the family.

For example if the government decides not to renew the TPV of a 
spouse who was in Australia before SIEVX and thus on an expiring 
three year TPV, or of a child born in Australia to a SIEVX survivor 
and spouse who are both TPV holders, this presents agonising serial 
choices for survivors on an XB451 visa - to stay on longer in 
Australia alone, losing access to their spouse and/or child, or to 
abandon their quest for asylum in Australia and return to Iraq as a 
family group with the first one who is ordered to leave.

It is hard to avoid a conclusion that SIEVX survivor families are 
being deliberately left in such cruel limbos of uncertainty; and that 
our government may be quite happy to see them all eventually forced 
back to Iraq, so that their stories may be more easily forgotten in 
Australia.

SOME EXAMPLES ON PUBLIC RECORD

The changes to TPV legislation in September 2001 certainly affect the 
families of survivors Faris Khadem and the sisters Najah and Zena 
Zubaydi.

More than half a dozen members of Faris Khadem's family, including 
his young son Ali had arrived by boat to Ashmore Reef in August 2001. 
Ali is on a three year protection visa that will expire at least a 
year before Faris's XB451 visa. Because of the changes to the 
Temporary Visa legislation outlined above, Ali cannot become a 
permanent resident. At best, the child Ali (now aged 11 - his mother 
Leyla and sister Zahra drowned on SIEVX and he and his father Faris 
are now alone together) is doomed to a cycle of three year TPV 
renewals, at worst he can be made to return to Iraq alone should it 
be deemed that he no longer needs protection.

Najah and Zena Zubaydi's parents, Najah's husband and two young 
daughters arrived in March 2001 and were granted 3 year TPVs in 
August that year when they were released from Port Hedland detention 
centre. It appears very unlikely that the family would have applied 
for permanent residency before September 2001. So like Ali Khadem 
mentioned above, they could be sent back to Iraq when their visas 
expire in August next year. Najah and Zena would be left here alone 
to await their eventual fate under their XB451 visas.

Both Faris Khadem and Najah Zubaydi lost a child in the SIEVX 
disaster - Najah's 18 month old son Karrar, and Faris' seven year old 
daughter Zahra, both drowned when SIEVX foundered. To have already 
lost a child and then to have the threat of separation from your 
remaining living family members hanging over your head must be very 
hard to endure.

Amal Hassan Basry and her son Rami survived the sinking of SIEVX. 
Amal's husband Abbas Akram is on a three year TPV which is due to 
expire this year. We are unsure of his situation. If he did not apply 
for permanent residency before September 2001 when the visa 
legislation was changed then he could be sent back to Iraq when his 
current visa expires.

The best-known of these tragedies is that of Sondos Ismail and her 
husband Ahmed Alzalimi . They lost their three daughters Zahra, 
Fatima and Eman on SIEV X as Ahmed waited in Australia. (They had 
already lost a baby soon after birth in Iran). According to a 
newspaper article by Kelly Burke written last year, Ahmed is eligible 
for permanent residency because he applied before the legislation 
changed in September 2001. We hope that report is correct - but Ahmed 
may still be vulnerable to being ordered back under the 'continuing 
need for protection' test.

Sondos and Ahmed's fifth and only living child, the baby Allaa, 
although born in Sydney at the beginning of this year is not an 
Australian citizen. 'Under law, children born in Australia assume the 
same immigration status as their parents.' 

The Australia that Allaa was born into is profoundly different from 
the one that her father sought asylum in four years ago:

In Oct 1999 the Australian Government introduced a TPV system 
advocated by Pauline Hanson, with the agreement of the Australian 
Labor Party. In September 2000 an Australian Federal Police - 
Indonesian National Police protocol begin joint cooperation to 
disrupt people smuggling syndicates in Indonesia. In September 2001 
month Operation Relex starts intercepting asylum seeker boats to 
Christmas Island and Ashmore Reef and the 'Pacific solution' begins. 
TPV legislation is strengthened with the agreement of the Australian 
Labor Party so that holders can never achieve permanent residency. In 
October 2001 Australia begins to tow asylum seeker vessels back to 
Indonesia and on 19 October SIEVX sinks.

Now in July 2003 seven SIEVX survivors and their families in 
Australia - genuine refugees, real human beings, our neighbours, 
people whose lives have been grievously damaged - are living in a 
hell generated by the tragic impact of these toxic initiatives.

Immigration Minister Ruddock has indicated that he is willing to 
consider aligning the time frames of TPVs for family members, but is 
firmly committed to the TPV policy.

By comparison, most of the other SIEVX survivors who were accepted by 
Scandinavian countries were offered permanent residency there. We 
know of no SIEVX survivor on a TPV-type visa anywhere else in the 
world. As far as we know, that exquisite degree of cruelty is 
uniquely Australian.

We also wonder now, why did Australian authorities offer to accept 
any SIEVX survivors here? Surely the Scandinavian countries and 
Canada would have been ready to give them all safe permanent homes? 
Was it simply a case of 'burden-sharing' for international 
presentational reasons? Or, did our authorities perhaps want to have 
a group of vulnerable (in visa terms) potential witnesses in 
Australia, in case it was ever convenient to mount prosecutions over 
SIEVX, eg in the possible upcoming prosecution of the SIEVX voyage 
book-keeper Khaled Daoed, if Sweden should agree to his extradition? 
Could that perhaps be a potential deal in the making - help us stitch 
up a file-closing case for Daoed to take the fall as the SIEVX 
ringleader, and then we might look favourably on finding a way for 
your families to stay in Australia?

As noted above, Labor has not challenged TPVs at either the stage of 
its introduction or of its subsequent tightening.

There are other damaged men on TPVs living in Australia who lost 
their entire families on SIEVX. ( eg Mohammed Alghazzi in Perth, Ali 
Mehdi Sobie and Haidar al-Zoohairi in Sydney and Hazam Al Rowaimi, 
last heard of heading for Perth) These men - as much SIEVX victims as 
those who are living with survivors in Australia - seem especially 
vulnerable to early removal as their TPVs expire. We don't know how 
many there may be.

Isn't it time for Mr Rudddock to treat these tragic SIEVX survivor 
families with humanity, by giving them all permanent residence as a 
special humanitarian decision within his discretionary powers, and 
end their agony? There are few enough of them, and the tragedy of 
SIEVX is - hopefully - unlikely ever now to be repeated. It would 
certainly surprise us, but we would genuinely welcome such a generous 
and altruistic act on the part of the Minister.

------

A letter-writing campaign has been organised by hopecaravan.com to 
help the SIEVX survivor families in their visa situation. Or you 
might want to send your own individual letters by fax or post to Mr 
Ruddock.The more letters the better: 
http://www.hopecaravan.com/ecampaign/sievx.asp 

 



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