"This hasn't been only a game for all of us," team member Firooza Amiri said from the grounds.
"It's been to represent and be [a] voice of millions of women's fight in Afghanistan."
"This hasn't been only a game for all of us," team member Firooza Amiri said from the grounds.
"It's been to represent and be [a] voice of millions of women's fight in Afghanistan."
As the overall number of asylum seekers in Australia continues to rise and is now over 120,000, Shadow Immigration Spokesperson Dan Tehan regularly criticises the Labor Government for not doing enough to get control of asylum seeker numbers. But with a Federal Election just months away, we do not know what either the Coalition or Labor will do to get on top of the issue.
Knowing Peter Dutton’s abysmal record on immigration integrity, including allowing the biggest labour trafficking scam in Australia’s history, Tehan has to tread carefully. While Tehan says “Australians will be cynical that Labor is serious about addressing this problem”, he avoids mentioning Dutton’s record or what a Coalition Government should have done when it was in power or would do in the future.
What is Dan Tehan and the Coalition offering on asylum seeker policy? By Abul Rizvi, P&I
Mrs Abraham was born in Eritrea, where she became a freedom fighter in the country's war for independence against Ethiopia at just 14-years-old. After years of fighting, she moved to Australia as a refugee in 1992.
Over the last three decades, Mrs Abraham has also helped create dozens of multicultural initiatives, including the Queensland Eritrean Community Association, the Australian African Women's Association and the Queensland African Communities Council.
She said she felt "humbled" to receive an OAM for her work with vulnerable people.
Auschwitz survivors have warned of the dangers of rising antisemitism as they marked the 80th anniversary of the liberation of the Nazi German death camp by Soviet troops in one of the last such gatherings of those who experienced its horrors.
In all, between 1941 and 1945, Nazi Germany and its collaborators systematically murdered six million Jews across German-occupied Europe, along with gypsies, sexual minorities, people with disability and others who offended Nazi ideas of racial superiority.
Auschwitz survivors warn of rising antisemitism 80 years on from the camp's liberation. Reuters, SBS
Dubbed “an Afghanistan women’s XI”, the refugee side will have its first match in three years when it faces a team assembled by Cricket Without Borders in a charity clash at the Junction Oval.
It’s a bad time to be non-white in Australia. Speaking out of both sides of his mouth, Peter Dutton has demanded an end to anti-Semitism and, at the same time, incited hatred of Aboriginal people, not just exploiting the anti-Voice surge of racism but inciting further racism against us. I agree that anti-Semitism is a scourge and must be tackled with tough laws and policing. So, too, are all forms of racism and xenophobia, particularly the rising levels of race hate against Aboriginal people, Muslims and other ethnicities, many of which have been singled out by Dutton.
In 2022, he alarmed the Australian–Chinese community when he made a shocking claim about a future war with China and compared China to Nazi Germany in the lead-up to World War II. He demonised African Australians, who he claimed so terrorised Melbourne that no one could go to a restaurant. He singled out Lebanese Australians, saying it was a mistake to take them in as refugees.
Marcia Langton - Peter Dutton’s deliberate Australia Day cruelty, The Saturday Paper
It all began to fall down with John Howard, accelerating through every successive government because of our obsessive national dread of “boat people”, to the point where — when it comes to how we treat asylum seekers — these days we flout the rules with a middle finger to posterity.
So it is that two recent decisions of the UN Human Rights Committee, calling Australia out for gross breaches of the ICCPR in relation to our treatment of refugees on the outsourced hellhole of Nauru, have been simply ignored by both the Australian government and — disgracefully — the Australian media.
Is international law even a thing anymore? Not when it comes to Nauru. By Michael Bradley, Crikey
Refugees who had been approved to travel to the United States before a 27 January deadline suspending America’s refugee resettlement program have had their travel plans canceled by the Trump administration.
Human Rights Watch, Jewish Council of Australia, Australian Federation of Islamic Councils, Australian National Imams Council, Human Rights Law Centre and Amnesty International condemn a recent spate of antisemitic hate crimes in Australia……..
…….These attacks follow a year of escalating hate crimes on the Jewish community and on the Muslim, Arab, and Palestinian communities in Australia. Over the past 15 months Islamophobic, anti-Arab, anti-Palestinian and antisemitic hate crimes include racist anti-Arab graffiti in Sydney; the planting of a homemade bomb in front of a Sydney home which was flying the Palestinian flag; the setting alight of a truck bearing the Palestinian flag which belonged to a man of Palestinian heritage in Melbourne; and the firebombing of Melbourne's Adass Israel synagogue. These forms of racism also include politicians denying the seriousness of Islamophobia and media reports using racist language.
Human Rights Law Centre : Statement on recent hate crimes in Australia
The award aims to recognise an individual with lived experience as a refugee who has generated positive awareness about refugees, helped create a positive understanding about the situation of refugees and, in doing so, built a more diverse and inclusive Australian community.
It is named after beloved sports broadcaster Les Murray AM, who hosted SBS’s The World Game football program and was himself a young refugee who arrived in Australia in 1956 at the age of 11 from Hungary.
Nominations open for the Australia for UNHCR – SBS Les Murray Award for Refugee Recognition
The Greens senator David Shoebridge said the process had been too slow.
Unlike other visas processes, Palestinian and Israeli nationals fleeing the conflict cannot apply for the temporary humanitarian visa. It is only available by invitation of the home affairs minister.
Shoebridge said Australia needed to overhaul its visa rules in responding to international crises to avoid the process being impacted by “narrow political interests”.
“We need to return this to the department to process visas independently, not based on the next opinion poll,” he said.
“After years of ad hoc refugee responses to rolling disasters in Sudan, Syria, Afghanistan, Ukraine and Palestine, it is clear we need a simpler and predictable policy in place for future crises. This disaster-by-disaster approach only benefits the minister at the time, who can wield discretionary visas powers based on narrow political interests.”
"It's gone from bad to worse," Human Rights Watch's Australia director Daniela Gavshon said.
"What we do know as well in Australia is that there's no human rights act, so there's no overarching piece of legislation that puts all the human rights regulations and rules and responsibilities into one place."
There is no federal charter of rights, but some states and territories in Australia — the ACT, Queensland and Victoria — have human rights legislation.
Exploitative practices like human trafficking, slavery, servitude, forced labour, debt bondage and forced marriage are all considered modern slavery under Australian law.
“The people of Gaza only need safety, to be able to return to our normal lives and not to face death on every corner.
“We cannot celebrate, after so many people died in Gaza. We are just happy to have this moment, to have some hope.
Australia’s “diabolical” treatment of asylum seekers and youth crime has worsened, a global human rights advocacy body has warned, urging voters to push back on leaders politicising the issue for gain.
Afghan citizens who fled the country with American assistance after the US’s chaotic withdrawal from Afghanistan remain stranded in third countries, new documents shared exclusively with the Guardian suggest, some at prison-like facilities and many with no clarity about their prospects for resettlement.
US officials won’t say exactly how many Afghans remain at such sites, where they were taken after the withdrawal that involved hundreds of thousands fleeing for their lives during the Taliban’s lightning takeover in 2021. Some advocates estimate that “hundreds” remain stranded in temporary facilities in up to three dozen countries.
For the decade since 2013, when Kabul fell to the Taliban, Canberra has given almost 13,000 “Offshore Refugee and Humanitarian visas” to Afghans. There are 230,000 on the waiting list. The Australian community is 72,000 strong and goes back to 19th-century camel drivers.
Internationally, we’re bit players. By mid-2024, Iran was the world’s largest refugee host, sheltering 3.8 million people with 99 per cent from Afghanistan, according to the Washington-based Migration Policy Institute.
Our border protection is no well-resourced ring of steel but relies on community spotters.
Mid-2024 media reports claimed the Australian Border Force (ABF), an agency of Home Affairs, paid fishermen with fuel for using their own dinghies to catch five unlawful arrivals believed to be from Senegal.
There's a renewed push in Indonesia to bring home the family members of Islamic State fighters, who are stuck in Syria.
Anti-terrorism experts estimate there are hundreds of Indonesian nationals held in prison camps there, roughly ten times the number of Australians.
The fall of the Assad regime last month has sparked calls to bring them home, but it won't be easy.
Featured: Rakyan Adibrata, Indonesia Country Director for the International Association for Counterterrorism and Security Professionals
Greg Barton, counter terrorism expert, Deakin-Lancaster University
Greg Barton: Indonesia's been wrestling with this for years, it has to be said. The Jokowi administration decided not to do it. Back in 2019 it decided it didn't want to risk political capital on this project. But even then the opinion was split. Since then Indonesia has greatly improved its capacity at rehabilitation generally.
Bill Birtles: He says it's likely Indonesia will seek to repatriate women and children in the coming years from Syria, but not necessarily the men who actively fought for Islamic State. And he believes Australia should do the same for around three dozen women and children still in the prison camps there.
Australia is a wealthy country with much greater resources per capita in terms of psychologists and people that work with rehabilitation programs. So Australia really has no excuse for not managing it.
Successive Australian governments brought home 25 women and children since the defeat of Islamic State in 2017, but further efforts have ground to a halt. Last year an advocacy group failed in a legal bid to compel the federal government to arrange the repatriation of the remaining Australians from the camps in Syria.
Push to repatriate Indonesian ISIS brides. By Bill Birtles, ABC News Radio
Pakistani Nobel Peace Prize laureate Malala Yousafzai has urged Muslim nations to place pressure on the Taliban by denouncing their severe restrictions on women's freedoms. During a rare visit back home to Pakistan, the human rights advocate spoke up for the plight of girls in Afghanistan - where for more than 3 years they've been banned from attending high school.
The United Nations Committee says there was insufficient water and sanitation for asylum seekers on Nauru.
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