Thursday 10 April 2014

For Australia to deport refugees to Cambodia would be absurd

For Australia to deport refugees to Cambodia would be absurd



For Australia to deport refugees to Cambodia would be absurd

The
Abbott government is said to be taking steps to export its refugee
problem to one of the region's poorest country, Cambodia. I've seen
first hand why this is a terrible idea






A Cambodian looks at photos of victims on display at the Toul Sleng Genocide museum.
A Cambodian looks at photos of victims on display at the Toul Sleng Genocide museum. Photograph: Paula Bronstein/Getty Images


In a nationwide poll published in January, 60% of Australians said they wanted boat arrivals treated more harshly. It now appears they're getting their way. After sending hundreds of asylum-seekers to Papua New Guinea (PNG), the second poorest country in southeast Asia, the Abbott government is said to be taking steps to export its refugee problem to Cambodia, another one of the region's poorest country and one of the most anarchical: a police state with a law and order deficit that could exceed even that of PNG.


Going
back a decade, I spent two years working as a reporter in Cambodia. On
any given day, I would write about crimes and injustices perpetrated
upon women, children, disabled people, the homeless and refugees. The
perpetrators were alarmingly often the monied elite working in cahoots
with police, the military or politicians – the very people and agencies
tasked to protect the public. 



One morning, I was dragged out of bed by a neighbour whose village had been flattened
by bulldozers during the night after a well connected businessman laid
claim to their land. When I arrived on the scene, the villagers were
camped on the roadside with the crushed and twisted remains of their
meagre belongings. Those who protested were met with brute force in the
form of electric cattle prods that left deep blue bruises across their
arms and backs. 



On another occasion, I was called to the office of renowned anti-trafficking activist Somaly Mam. A few hours earlier, armed men raided her women's shelter and abducted 83 women and girls
who only a few days earlier had been rescued from a city brothel by
anti-trafficking police. It was later revealed that the armed raid was
ordered and paid for by the brothel's owner, a general in the army, who
then put his sex slaves straight back to work. 



In both these
cases, nobody was ever charged. Those are everyday examples of
Cambodia's unique culture of impunity that harks back to the Khmer Rouge
genocide of the 1970s, when 1.7m people were beaten, starved, or worked
to death. Despite a lengthy tribunal sponsored by the international
community, only one Khmer Rouge henchman has been successfully prosecuted in Cambodia.



If
another reason was needed to show Cambodia's unsuitability as a dumping
ground for asylum-seekers, one need look no further than those who made
the mistake of arriving on their own accord. Cambodia has a long and
storied history of extraditing refugees on request of the authoritarian
regimes they fled from – most infamously in 2009 when 20 Uygur
minorities, including a pregnant woman and children, were deported to China
while their cases were being reviewed by the UN commission for human
rights. On return to China, 17 of the 20 were detained and sentenced in
closed courtroom trials.



Refugees in Cambodia are also
susceptible to being further victimised by a deeply ingrained sense of
xenophobia borne from more than five centuries of war with neighbouring
states. Siem Reap, home of the famous Angkor Wat archeological park,
translates literally as the "defeat of Siam'" – the historical name of
Thailand. In 2003, rumours that a Thai television star said Angkor Wat
belonged to Thailand sparked a wave of riots that saw the Thai embassy in Phnom Penh and dozens of Thai-owned businesses and restaurants burnt to the ground.


Many
Cambodians also bear special animosity towards the country's largest
ethnic minority, the Vietnamese, whose allegiances are assumed to lie
east of the border. Stories attesting to Vietnamese duplicity passed
down between generations and fuelled by stories in the tabloid press
regularly manifest in random acts of violence on the streets of
Cambodia. Most recently, an ethnic Vietnamese man was lynched by a mob following a minor traffic infraction inFebruary, while police looked on in broad daylight.



It
is in this total vacuum of opportunity, human rights, law and order
that Hor Namhong – the Cambodian foreign minister who ignored a summons
to appear before the Khmer Rouge tribunal after he was accused
by a witness of running of a re-education camp – is considering an
Australian request to grant refuge to some of our asylum-seekers. “In
the past, Cambodians have fled their country to other countries,” he
said after a meeting with Australian counterpart Julia Bishop earlier
this year, “but now it's time that Cambodia takes in refugees from other
countries.” 



I am going to go out on a limb here and suggest he
was motivated by something other than compassion. Australia is set to
give $85m in aid to Cambodia this year – significantly less than the
$527m given to PNG yearly – but reason enough for the recipient to
kowtow to donor's demands, no matter how ridiculous they may seem.



I
can think of few things more terrifying than being set adrift without
money, marketable skills or contacts in Cambodia. Should Australia
succeed in its mission to deport asylum-seekers there, it will become
yet another in a long line of immoral and illegal acts of parliament
future generations of Australians will have to say sorry
for.
















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