Najeeba's story

Najeeba Wazefadost
“Leaving your country for good is one of the hardest decisions you can be forced to make.”
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Fact 1

Fact 1
It is not illegal to seek asylum in Australia, even if arriving by boat.

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Farida and Hussain's story

Hussain Dad
“My children are safe and we can finally sleep well for the whole night, without fear and bomb blasts.”
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fact 2

Fact 2
In Australia, there is 1.1 refugee for every 1,000 people.

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John's story

John Jegasothy
“I’m really concerned about the misconceptions about refugees coming to this country.”
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Fact 3

Fact 3
In 2010, 6,879 asylum seekers arrived in Australia. That’s only 6.8% of the seats in the MCG.
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Chaman's story

Chaman Shah Nasiri
“After I left, my father was tortured so badly he died in prison… The same would have happened to me.”
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Fact 4

Fact 4
Australian Centrelink benefits for an asylum seeker? $0.

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Ashane's story

Ashane
“We knew the boat would be very dangerous, but there was nothing else. Everything else was hopeless.”
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Fact 5

Fact 5
The number of refugees who have arrived by boat, and who have been terrorists? Zero.
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Dinh Tran’s story

Dinh Tran
“When we left, mum & dad had already accepted that we were all going to die. You risk everything on a boat.”
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Fact 6

Fact 6
In 2009, 8,427 sought asylum in Australia – compared to 45,197 in the United Kingdom.
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Progress in moving kids from detention centres

21/02/2011

Published by ABC News

View the article

The story said

The Immigration Department has defended the progress being made in moving asylum seeker children and vulnerable families into the community during an update to a Senate estimates hearing. Refugee advocates say the process has been too slow.
Mental health experts and refugee advocates also criticised the decision to keep asylum seekers on Christmas Island while their applications were fast-tracked; whilst the Immigration Department stated to the Senate it had relied on psychological advice when making decisions on the welfare of survivors of Christmas Island shipwreck.

Did you know

The Australian Government has promised that no children will be held in detention centres in Australia. However, in recent times the distinction has been made between ‘detention centres’ and ‘detention facilities’ leading to hundreds of children being locked up. Last year, the government conceded that even detention facilities were not an appropriate place to keep children, and pledged to move most children and their families into community based arrangements.
Detention, especially remote detention, is unsuitable for all vulnerable people. UN guidelines state that once health and security checks are complete, detention should only ever be used as a last resort.

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