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| ben moretti on Wed, 15 May 2002 14:52:47 +0200 (CEST) |
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| <nettime> In the Footsteps of the Graverobbers |
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In the Footsteps of the Graverobbers
One of the lowest forms of life in classical literature were
graverobbers... opportunists who dug up the remains of dead people
just so that they could plunder whatever wealth may have been buried
with them.
Nazi Germany had a similar form of low-life, whose job it was to sort
through the clothing, spectacles, and other personal belongings of
Jewish concentration camp victims. Even the gold fillings in their
teeth were dug out after the executions. Every little bit of wealth
was exploited, without a thought for the suffering of the people they
were ripping off.
The Australian public has expressed horror and indignation at the
callous indifference to the sufferings of others on the part of
so-called "people smugglers". These opportunists take advantage of
desperate individuals fleeing for their lives, many of whom have lost
family members to cruel political regimes, often just because they
converted to Christianity or belonged to some other minority
religious group. In the tradition of the graverobbers, people
smugglers weigh up how much each victim is worth, and then charge
them the maximum that they can get, for a square foot of space on a
leaky boat.
Deeply traumatised asylum seekers have run from the Taliban, Al
Quaeda, and other similar regimes, only to find themselves in further
fear for their lives at the hand of the people smugglers. And then
along comes the Australian Government, sworn enemy of the people
smugglers and sworn enemy of the Taliban and Al Quaeda, and what do
we offer those who have risked and virtually lost everything to find
their freedom?
We offer them accommodation behind razor wire in places like Woomera,
where, apart from guards and the families of guards, their nearest
real neighbours may be hundreds of kilometres away. But we also
offer them telephones. With a telephone, they can contact relatives
back in their home country. They can enqujire about legal
assistance. Never mind that the average detainee gets less than one
visitor a year because of the remoteness of the prison camp. A
telephone can bring them communication with friendly Australians...
communication that can keep their hopes alive.
And this is where the tradition of the graverobbers has taken another
shameful turn. The Australian Government has, under the guise of
national security, granted a private American company free rein to
rob the prisoners of whatever wealth remains in their trust accounts
simply by charging them whatever they like for the privilege of using
the phones that have been especially installed in the Woomera
detention centre... phones which will not accept Telstra, Optus,
Vodaphone, or any other phonecard. The phones have been especially
constructed to use only one phonecard, and it is one of the rarest
and most expensive cards in the entire world.
An agreement has been worked out with a tiny company that, up until
now, had only owned a handful of telephones on a handful of trains
(e.g. the Spirit of Tasmania), to supply special telephones to be
used exclusively by prisoners in Woomera. Pay-Tel Australia Ltd. has
a little office at unit 4/43 Railway Road, in Blackburn Victoria.
But the company, in conjunction with Australian Correctional
Management, has managed to squeeze hundreds of thousands (if not
millions) of dollars out of people who are practically on death row,
just by charging $1.25 a minute for the use of their phones... phones
which have been specifically designed not to use any other form of
phonecard.
A monopolistic and criminally overpriced telephone service which
would be outlawed in any other Australian situation, has not only
been allowed at Woomera, but it has received added protection from
accountability on the grounds that whatever the Australian
Government, Department of Immigration, Australian Correctional
Management, Pay-Tel Australia conspiracy wishes to charge their
prisoners in Woomera for phone calls should be regarded as top secret
classified information, which is vital to the national security.
Phone Pay-Tel, at (03) 9877-0222, and ask them how much it costs per
minute to use their phone cards, and you will encounter fierce
opposition. If "Peggy" answers the phone, she will insist on knowing
your name, first and last, (at the same time that she will refuse to
give hers), what organisation you represent, why you are enquiring,
how you expect to get a phone card to anyone at Woomera if you should
happen to get one anyway (which she says is not available anywhere in
the world outside of the canteen at Woomera itself), and then she
will tell you that the people who can tell you how many minutes you
can talk for the $22 that they charge for their cards are all "out of
the office".
If you should get through to Stuart, the "sales manager", who also
lacks a surname, he will tell you that he's not prepared to talk
about it, that the whole subject of their phone cards is a
confidential one between himself and the Department of Immigration.
Call the head office of ACM (Australian Correctional Management) in
Sydney, and they'll say that the people who know are not available
too, that it's really a matter that is handled entirely by the people
in Woomera, and that the people in Sydney are not kept informed about
such things.
Phone the ACM number in Woomera (08) 8673-7007, and Jeff will most
likely put you on hold while he checks with the canteen, only to tell
you that the canteen people are not in today, and probaby won't be in
tomorrow either. Jeff also refuses to reveal a last name. Jeff will
insist that no officials in Woomera know how much it costs per minute
to telephone either a local, STD, ISD, or mobile number from the
detention centre, and so there is no point putting you through to
anyone. The information is known only to the people who work at the
canteen, and they are unreachable.
Our enquiries have revealed that the lowest fee for a call from the
Pay-Tel phone on the Spirit of Tasmania is $1.25 for one minute.
This compares with prices ranging from 9 cents a minute for an
international call to as much as 22 cents a minute for a call
anywhere in Australia, using a normal phone card. In other words,
the mark-up inside of Woomera, for something which is vital to the
well-being of people who have supposedly only been detained there
temporarily for their own protection, is well over 500 percent, and
possibly much more. Until Pay-Tel, or someone above them chooses to
tell us how much it costs to talk for a minute on one of their cards,
the public can only imagine the worst.
This is surely graverobbing at its worst. People who have already
been robbed of the lives of family members, robbed of their homes,
robbed of many thousands of dollars to get here, robbed of their
freedom, often for years at a time, and possibly robbed of their
lives if forcibly returned to their home country, are being
systematically fleeced by the conspiracy that exists at Woomera, in
an effort to leave them totally penniless by the time they leave
detention.
Shame on Phillip Ruddock! Shame on John Howard! And shame on the
people of Australia, if we let them continue to act in such a way in
our name.
Dave McKay, on behalf of the Refugee Embassy, Woomera, S.A. 5720
Phone (02) 4954-2590 or 0407-238805
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