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AUSTRALIA

Community trust the vital ingredient in refugee resettlement

  • 27 February 2007

In the prelude to the annual country and western music festival, the Tamworth local council struck fateful tones of discord. After a decision in December to reject becoming a resettlement area under the Federal Government’s Humanitarian Refugee Resettlement Program (HRRP), and provocative comments by the local Mayor regarding criminal activities of the existing Sudanese population in Tamworth, the township quickly became the centre of a racist firestorm. A closer reading of events revealed that much of this criticism was unfounded and misplaced.

The broader concerns of the council, in tune with community sentiment, were that the existing government HRRP was ill-equipped to deliver full services to newly arrived refugee families, threatening the longer -term success of the pilot scheme. In eventually accepting the resettlement plan last month, the Tamworth council demanded a more comprehensive community role in supporting the resettlement program to avoid a shortfall in services.

Although outgoing Minister for Immigration and Multicultural Affairs Amanda Vanstone applauded Tamworth’s about face and the 'big heart' of rural Australia, it was clear that refugee resettlement is not singularly grounded in the root of compassion. Indeed, this debate touched on a number of prevailing concerns, particularly how best asylum seekers can adapt, engage and contribute in a new society facing deficient services and divided opinions.

The Tamworth incident was played out at a time of glaring media profile for the Sudanese community in Australia. The recent cases of convicted rapist Hakeem Hakeem, and of Taban Gany, sentenced for drink driving causing serious injury, have subjected the wider Sudanese population to columns of outrage in the press and to simmering distrust from within sections of the public.

Moreover, these cases have demonstrated how within a refugee framework, issues of law and order are easily muddied by suspicion of cultural difference. Several prominent members of the Sudanese community in Australia have publicly condemned these crimes and aired their concerns at criminal and anti-social behaviour particularly among the younger Sudanese community. But they have also noted that emotional trauma and the transition from a world of conflict affect their current lives. This should be the starting point for addressing problems in the community. It is unfortunate that sections of the media have used this anguished burden to frame all Sudanese within a portrait of lawlessness. Recent overtures by the Department of Immigration towards reducing the intake of Sudanese refugees and effectively looking elsewhere would be a regrettable