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News : Lenten Seminars 2005
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Date: 24 February 2005
Democracy demands honesty: refugee barrister
Uniya 2005 National Lenten Seminars
Democracy demands a degree of honesty and compassion in politicians
and the courage of the media to report the truth, refugee barrister
Julian Burnside argued last night at Uniya's Lenten Seminar 2005
in Melbourne.
"The essence of democracy is that the elected representatives
are chosen because their constituents think this candidate or that
will best represent their views in parliament. If a candidate lies
about his or her beliefs and values, the democratic process is compromised.
The greater the lie, the greater the damage to the true course of
democracy", he said.
Mr Burnside said that the Government's treatment of the Bakhtiyari
family, who were deported at Christmas time in controversial circumstances,
is an example of the inconsistencies between truth and the spin
that come from some elected representatives.
"Showing compassion to the Bakhtiyari family would have been
consistent with family values, Christian charity, fairness and decency
– the values Mr Howard claims to hold", he said.
"Mr Howard, Mr Ruddock and Mrs Vanstone are personally responsible
for the shocking damage suffered by the [Bakhtiyari] children. They
hold themselves out as Christians; they embrace 'family values'.
But at Christmas time in 2004 they denied kindness or compassion
to 6 children whose lives they have blighted.
"Unfortunately, the government seems concerned that mercy
and compassion set a bad precedent. Given that the government had
a discretion to allow the family to stay, it is difficult to understand
why it insisted on removing a family it had damaged so badly, unless
its purpose was to send a message: not to people smugglers, but
to us. Its message to us is this: 'We hold absolute power; we do
not have to acknowledge public sentiment; we can crush anyone who
messes with us.'
"This is why honesty matters", he said.
Mr Burnside asked the audience to imagine what it would be like
if the Government was honest about its conduct and the Opposition
and media had a bit more spine.
"Imagine if he [Mr Howard] had said at the 2004 election:
'My government locks up innocent people. We treat them cruelly,
because we don’t want to encourage their type. We have power
to gaol innocent people for life. I will not help the Bakhtiyari
children at Christmas time because I don’t have to. I will
only show compassion for popular victims.'
"Imagine how different things might be if we had an honest
Opposition. Too timid to take a stand, the Labor party has spent
the last 8 years nodding passively at every failure of human rights,
every bit of dishonesty, every erosion of basic rights.
"Imagine also how different things might be if the press in
this country had shown some spine over the past few years. Many
– perhaps most – journalists in Australia today shy
away from unpopular truths", he said.
Comparing the media coverage of Cornelia Rau's case, an Australian
resident with mental illness held in immigration detention for nearly
a year, to the many stories of torture and ill-treatment of non-Australian
residents in detention centres, Mr Burnside argued that in presenting
an unbalanced view of Australia’s conduct, the press engages
in its own form of dishonesty.
Mr Burnside concluded with a warning: "When the process is
complete, when we have been stripped of our liberties for our own
protection, when the values which once held this nation high have
been terminally debased, then we will realise that honesty matters."
The Jesuit Lenten Seminars will continue in other cities over
the next few weeks, including Canberra, Western Sydney, Sydney,
Brisbane and Wollongong. For the full schedule, please visit www.uniya.org
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© 2004 Uniya, PO Box 522,
Kings Cross NSW 1340
Tel: +61 2 9356 3888 Fax: +61 2 9356 3021
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