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"No lines sector off the sky so high above, though all the nations of the Earth be bound about with borders."

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  • Ahmad Al Akabi: Another asylum seeker death in Villawood

    Ahmad Al-Akabi, aged 41, had a wife and was a father of three girls aged two, four and seven.  He had come to Australia and had hoped to eventually bring his family with him.  He arrived by boat.  He was from Iraq.  He is reported to have been in detention for over a year:  first in Christmas Island and then in Villawood (a security facility surrounded by razor wire in Sydney).     He had fled Iraq after being attacked by religious militias.[1] It is said that his two applications for asylum were rejected.  It is also reported that he had begged immigration authorities to be allowed to go home.  His deportation request was confirmed…

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    The borders of virtue and power

    September 24, 2011

    Fifty Million Refugees and Displaced People

    July 14, 2014

    UN High Commissioner for Human Rights in Australia

    May 25, 2011
  • Abolish Foreignness

    Eight million children under the age of five die each year from largely preventable causes.  One billion people live in abject poverty. Thousands die crossing international borders while fleeing poverty, war or persecution.  Rich countries reinforce barriers, laws and measures to prevent people crossing their borders.  Hundreds of thousands are held in migration prisons  as if they were criminals. 67 million people live as refugees or are internally displaced as a result of persecution, war, poverty or other causes.   Believing that human beings are “foreigners” makes such profound human rights violations possible.

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    Why Global Citizenship?

    April 3, 2011

    Can we be foreign to our own selves?

    March 31, 2011

    UN High Commissioner for Human Rights in Australia

    May 25, 2011
  • The Berlin Wall and Barack Obama

      In recent days Germans and those affected by the Cold War are celebrating the 20th anniversary of the fall of the Berlin Wall. It is an anniversary worth celebrating. A chasm between the politics of the west and the communist world dissolved and people that had been kept apart for 40 years were suddenly able to come together. The process has not always been easy and far from perfect, particularly in respect of poverty. Nonetheless walls came down: literally and metaphorically.    The White House press release on 6 November leading up to the event says little beyond congratulations:  On the occasion of the 20th Anniversary of the fall…

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    Elysium – The Future of Human Rights is Now

    October 28, 2014
    Hague Yang's Changing From From to From

    Ekphrasis on Ekphrasis: Haegue Yang’s Changing From From to From

    December 9, 2023
    Graphs of migration planning levels for Australia http://www.immi.gov.au/media/statistics/statistical-info/visa-grants/ creative commons licence 3.0 attribution

    Crossing Over: does immigration policy discriminate?

    August 17, 2014
  • Angelina Jolie and the Refugee Warehouses

    What makes someone like Angelina Jolie take an interest in the lives of refugees?  What makes anyone take interest?   In this video Angelina visits refugees in Afghanistan.  It’s clear that there is no “foreignness” in how she relates to them.  She sees them as people who are suffering, and to whom we should respond.

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    UN High Commissioner for Human Rights in Australia

    May 25, 2011
    gate at Christmas Island Detention Centre

    Three reasons for Abandoning Mandatory Detention

    July 9, 2011

    The borders of virtue and power

    September 24, 2011
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