donate

petitions

Edmund Rice Centre

15 Henley Rd
(PO Box 2219)
Homebush West,
NSW 2140
AUSTRALIA

Ph:  (02) 8762 4200
Fx:  (02) 8762 4220

Int'l Ph: +61 2 8762 4200
Int'l Fx: +61 2 8762 4220

Email: erc@erc.org.au

Located just 100 metres to the south of Flemington Railway Station. Link to new location on Google Maps

Brisbane Annexe

5 Abingdon St
(Postal: 84 Park Rd)
Woolloongabba,
QLD 4102

Ph 1: (07) 3103 7376
Ph 2: (02) 8090 1976
Fax: (02) 8762 4220

Staffed part-time
 - please call for appt

 

media releases publications research submissions ERC event photos

View Document

Description :

MEDIA RELEASE -- Sydney, April 2012

ERC research in Afghanistan uncovers grave dangers faced by deportees from Australia

Deportations research just conducted in Afghanistan by the respected Australian social justice organisation, Edmund Rice Centre, has revealed further horrors confronted by asylum seekers who have been returned there by the Australian Government.

Since 2002 the Edmund Rice Centre has conducted research to determine what happens to the asylum seekers that Australia rejects  

Full Text :
“In this visit to Kabul, further to our previous visits, we met and interviewed another 31 returned asylum seekers. 29 of these 31 are living in extreme danger,” affirmed ERC Director, Phil Glendenning. “We confirmed the deaths of another two returnees and the kidnapping of one other who is now presumed dead.”

“The majority of these men are unable to live with their wives and children because of the risk their simple presence would pose to the safety of their family,” he said. “We were able to find a 17 year old boy who was sent back from Australia last year and has ended up living on the street.”

“One man I interviewed had recently survived a rocket being fired through his house. His wife and his father were killed instantly. He lives now in hiding in Kabul - along with his six children – all under the age of nine.”

“The returnees are being actively targeted for having left the country, because they are seen as being favourable to the West, and many are falsely held to have converted to Christianity. According to the Independent Human Rights Commission the situation is deteriorating rapidly and security just fifteen minutes on the road to Ghazni cannot be guaranteed,” Mr Glendenning continued.

“We hold deep concern as to both the accuracy and independence of the information about the security situation for civilians in Afghanistan that was provided to asylum seekers whilst held in Australia’s detention centres. The evidence provided by the returnees at interview indicates the systemic use of deception as part of a strategy to coerce acceptance of voluntary repatriation or to encourage acquiescence to forcible removal from Australia.”

“These asylum seekers and their families should never have been returned to Afghanistan. They must not now continue to be forgotten,” he said.

“The Edmund Rice Centre is recommitting to doing three things: firstly, publishing the results of our research of the deportees’ cases for the UN and the Australian Government; secondly, with this research lobbying in Australia and internationally for changes and increased safeguards and oversight; thirdly, rebuilding public awareness to highlight the appalling mistakes made and the need for Australia to take responsibility for what we have done, and to work to get these poor people finally to safety.”

“In the past the Edmund Rice Centre has had some success in advocating through the UN for the asylum seekers deported from Australia to achieve resettlement in the US, UK, Canada, NZ and Sweden. This year we will be taking this humanitarian appeal to these same nations again,” Mr Glendenning said.

“It is hard to believe we share the same planet. At some stage our nation has got to recover its humanity. I think that doing whatever we can to help those thrown away by us is a step in that direction.”

Over the past ten years the Edmund Rice Centre has conducted research into what happens to Australia's rejected asylum seekers. Two major reports have been published Deported to Danger and Deported to Danger II – leading to the making of the television documentary, A Well Founded Fear, which screened nationally in 2008.

For interview or comment contact:-
Phil Glendenning: (02)8762-4200 or Sean Cleary: (02)8090-1976

NOTE: ERC urgently needs support for the work for asylum seekers.

May 2012 update: ERC Director, Phil Glendenning, recently spent 10 days in Afghanistan interviewing returned asylum seekers again in Kabul.

ERC is redoubling our efforts to find a third-country resettlement option for those returnees from Australia with whom we have been able to make contact. We need financial support to achieve this.

Such work uncovers high levels of risk for the deportees (and for our researchers). Research publications are available here.

Listen to Phil speak of the visit to ABC Radio National's Phillip Adams.

Please donate now so that this work may continue. Your donation is tax deductible!

ERC Deportation Research - Index


Current Files

Name sort_none Size sort_none Uploaded sort_none Actions
ERC_Afghanistan_Research_uncovers_dangers_to_deportee_from_Australia_04Apr2012.pdf 137.93 KB 04/04/2012 Download

Latest News: (1) Newsletter 7 Dec: ERC InTouch -- (2) ERC Media: UN climate talks without ambition -- (3) Just Comment 15.3: Cocos Islands

 

Doha Diary: PCP at COP18

26th Nov - 7th Dec 2012
COP18 progress reports from PCP delegates at Doha conference on UN Framework Convention on Climate Change
Doha Report Back: 10am Tues, 11th Dec 2012
in Sydney CBD. Hear PCP's delegates views

ERC InTouch -- eNewsletter

ERC InTouch -- eNewsletter

To subscribe: click here

Latest editions: 

Fri, 7th Dec 2012
Fri, 5th Oct 2012  
Thurs, 6th Sept 2012
Tues, 5th Jun 2012
Fri, 27th Apr 2012
Mon, 26th Mar 2012
Tues, 14th Feb 2012
Wed, 21st Dec 2011

Fact-sheets on key issues:
- 10 Essential Facts on Asylum Seekers
- Debunking asylum myths in 2010
- High Court & deportations - ERC release
- Climate change - still a great moral challenge

PCP: ERC & Climate Change

ERC initiative the Pacific Calling Partnership promotes awareness of the devastating effects of climate change on low-lying island communities of the Pacific. The PCP campaign goes beyond both the science and the spin to make evident 'the human face of climate change'.

Read more

Donate to support ERC's work

URGENT! Support our work for asylum seekers.

Update: ERC Director, Phil Glendenning, recently returned to Australia from Afghanistan after 10 days interviewing returned asylum seekers again in Kabul.

ERC is redoubling our efforts to find a third-country resettlement option for those returnees from Australia with whom we have been able to make contact. We need financial support to achieve this.

Such work uncovers high levels of risk for the deportees (and for our researchers). Research publications are available here.

Listen to Phil speak of the visit to ABC Radio National's Phillip Adams.

Please donate now so that this work may continue. Your donation is tax deductible!

Search site