Protest in Australia Against the Rape Law

Protesters holding banner in front of Afghanistan Embassy, Canberra Australia.

Protesters holding banner in front of Afghanistan Embassy, Canberra Australia.

Tuesday May 12, 2009–- Afghanistani Australians from around Australia gathered in Canberra to voice their concern over the increasing Talibanization of Afghanistan as well as to condemn Afghanistan’s now infamous Rape Law. Protesters shouted slogans against the shameless move by religious fundamentalists to further rid women of their basic rights in clear violation of United Nations declaration on Human Rights, to which Afghanistan is a signatory. They further urged the Australian public and government to use their influence to ensure Human Rights are upheld in Afghanistan.

Large number of protesters were women.

Large number of protesters were women.

The protesters, majority of who were women, took their concerns to the Australian Parliament House and later to the gates of the Afghanistan Embassy in Canberra where they formally filed their protest with the Afghanistani Ambassador to Australia, who promised to pass the concerns of the protesters to authorities in Kabul.

Some of the articles in The Shi’a Personal Status Law that are in gross violation of the Human Rights are as follows:

  • Treatment of women as sex objects
  • Legalization of marital rape, including the obligation on women to submit to their husbands’ sexual desires at a minimum of four times a week.
  • Age discrimination, legalization of marriage at 16 for girls and 18 for boys
  • Legalization of forced marriages
  • Child Abuse and Child Marriage, thereby the legalization of intercourse with a minor
  • Allowing men to have multiple wives
  • And more …
Protesters demanded the Australian Govt. to use its influence against the Rape Law.

Protesters demanded the Australian Govt. to use its influence against the Rape Law.

Demands:

  1. All the people of Afghanistan should have the right to enjoy freedom, liberty, freedom of speech as well as the right to exercise their belief.
  2. All marriages should be voluntary and sexual relationship within marriage should be on voluntary basis too.
  3. We demand the abolition of laws that allow men to have multiple wives.
  4. Women are not the property of men. The obligation on them to be subjects to their husbands’ permission must be abolished.
  5. We urge the Australian government to condemn ‘The Rape Law’ and use its influence to ensure Human Rights are upheld in Afghanistan.
  6. The Shiite Personal Status Law is in gross violation of Human Rights, it is a cruel attacked against women. It must therefore be repealed and its provisions eliminated without any delay.
Protesters demanded the Rape Law must be repealed.

Protesters demanded the Rape Law must be repealed.

English Telefilm “Guiltless” by Hazaragi Drama Association

Quetta– English Telefilm, “Guiltless” by Hazaragi Drama Association is to be released soon.

HDA while talking to HazaranewsPK said their telefilm is pending due to financial problems of HDA and requested the Hazara business community and diaspora abroad to contribute financial assistance. Director of HDA and writer of “Guiltless” Muhammad Ali Dana told their new film is about the consecutive target killing of Hazaras in Quetta Pakistan. The story of the film focuses on a family victim of terrorism.

Muhammad Ali Dana, Director of HDA is the writer of “Guiltless”. Script of the film has been edited by Professor Nazir Hussain. Paragon Academy’s Sajjad Asim and Learners Academy’s Mehdi and Abbas have also contributed in the script. Actors of the film include Nazir Hussain Danish, Abay Danish, Mujtaba, Hina Batool, Mehdi, Abbas and Salman. Acting instructors included actor of Pakistan Television, Najeebullah Hazara and artist, Naseem Javed. Background Damboora of the film is played by Khair Ali Shahristani.

Actors of Guiltless, by Hazaragi Drama Association.

Actors of Guiltless, by Hazaragi Drama Association.

M Ali Dana told HazaranewsPK they have finalized the film. Its release is pending due to financial problems of HDA. Contributions can be made at Account Number 60382-4, Shabbir Hussain, Habib Bank Limited, Complex Branch Quetta.

HDA presented its first stage show in 1996. It has produced about 26 dramas yet including Mullah e Na Mullah and Londoni, written by Shaheed Hussain Ali Yousafi.

Recording to Guiltless, by Hazaragi Drama Association.

Recording to Guiltless, by Hazaragi Drama Association.

April 29th 2009: Hazaragi Drama Association (HDA) has appealed to Hazara businessmen and affluent members of society to ensure their financial contributions wholeheartedly to the association for releasing successfully the English movie named as “Guiltless” made on merciless target killings of innocent Hazara citizens in Quetta , a press release of HDA made available to this website on Thursday said.

The HDA, has made the televised-film, “Guiltless”, in English language which focused on the current waves of terrorism and brutal target killings of innocent Hazaras who have been fallen victims in the recent waves of acts of terror mercilessly and guiltlessly in Quetta .

The Drama Association has appealed to affluent Hazara tribesmen to contribute financially in favour of

Hazaragi Book “NOO BOKO” Published



May 13 2009 Quetta–
Hazaragi poetry book, NOO BOKO (Nine Peak of the Mountains) written by renowned poet in Quetta, Liaqat Ali Aajiz has been published in Quetta. The book includes Hazaragi poetry about motherland Hazarajat and nine popular Hazara heroes. Mr. Aajiz has beautifully expressed his love towards the motherland and heroes. The book has been published by Humanitarian And Development Assistance in Focus (HADAF). The book is available in all bookshops of Hazara Town, Alamdar Road and Mehrabad.

Asylum seekers delivered to Christmas Island




THE largest contingent of asylum seekers - 187 people - arrived at Christmas Island yesterday aboard supply ship HMAS Tobruk.

The ship had been steaming to the island and its immigration processing facility with 138 refugees and 12 defence escorts on board, when it was diverted to collect another 49 rescued from a sinking boat by the crew of patrol boat HMAS Maryborough off Broome in WA.

HMAS Tobruk will anchor off the island for 48 hours.

It was expected the transfer of the 187, 20 at a time, by a barge crewed by Customs officials, would take all day.

Unloading began yesterday. The arrivals were given health, quarantine and baggage checks before being sent to an immigration facility or detention camp.

A total of 387 people now are being processed by immigration officials at the island facility.

Before yesterday's influx, 310 were on the island of which 198 were in the detention centre, 79 in a temporary camp and 33 were in community detention.

Most of the new arrivals, including all single adult males, will go the centre

Due to the large number of fresh arrivals it is unlikely that the government's 90-day processing time frame will be met for all the potential refugees.

Navy and Customs vessels and aircraft are stretched to breaking point and Immigration officials are overwhelmed by the biggest influx of boat people since the government softened its policy last year.

So far this year 11 boats have been intercepted and 18 have been picked up since the government policy changed last September.

They have carried a total of 676 men, women and children including 479 from the 11 boats this year.

Most of the boat people have come from Iraq and Afghanistan with a smattering of Sri Lankans displaced by civil war and other nationalities and thousands more are ready to make the perilous ocean journey.

HMAS Tobruk will depart from the island tomorrow and will remain under the control of Border Protection Command.

People-smuggling baron Ali Cobra seized in action


ONE of the biggest fish in Indonesia's people-smuggling racket has been netted, after police raided a house in the eastern port city of Makassar.

The 30-year-old - known to asylum seekers the world over as Ali Cobra and described by Indonesian authorities as the "Noordin M.Top" of the trafficking racket, in reference to the regional terror tsar who has eluded capture for years - was seized on Monday night.

Ali Cobra, also operating under the name Labasa Ali, was in the process of organising a trip to Australia for 10 Afghan asylum seekers, some of whom had previously tried to make the perilous trip but had been detained by Indonesian police.

All 10 Afghan men, as well as the alleged people-smuggler, were captured in the swoop. News of the arrest comes as Australia finds itself confronting a new wave of boat arrivals.

On Tuesday, Border Protection Command intercepted a boat carrying 50 asylum seekers - the 11th such vessel to be detected this year. And late on Tuesday night, four asylum seekers found on a beach on Deliverance Island in the Torres Strait arrived at Christmas Island. The men - two Afghans, a Sri Lanklan and an Indian - were transported on a commercial flight from Perth.

Ali Cobra has established a dominant hold over the trade in recent years; according to one senior Indonesian immigration official who spoke on condition of not being identified, "in almost every case in recent times he is mentioned".

This includes an ill-fated attempt in January by a group of 18 Afghans, Pakistanis and Burmese to sail in a small fishing boat from Rote Island, west of Timor, to Ashmore Reef. Nine of those on board, including a nine-year-old boy, died when the boat sank.

One of the 10 Afghans arrested this week used a hidden mobile phone to tell The Australian from his immigration detention cell - having been returned there after Monday night's raid - that it was "absolutely" the Rudd Government's relaxed policy on boatpeople that was driving the surge in arrivals by sea.

"Absolutely. We, like everybody who tries to go, we know the detention regulations have been lifted since the fall of John Howard," said Kabul man Gulistan Ali, 32.

"We know the new Government has condemned the actions of the previous one, and has made the policies much easier for asylum seekers. We know this."

Mr Ali said he and two fellow Afghans escaped from the Indonesian detention centre about a week ago by scaling a 20m wall, leaping to the ground, hiding in dense jungle for two days and then walking 60km to Makassar, where they were contacted by phone and given an address to meet their handler.

Police swooped when the group assembled at the house.

Gulistan Ali and his two fugitive companions had previously tried to make the dangerous sea crossing on February 2, when they were arrested in the southeast Sulawesi port of Bau-Bau, preparing to board a small wooden boat.

All three had been in the detention centre, near Makassar city, since then. Gulistan Ali said the "difficult psychological situation" of being incarcerated in the "brutal conditions" there had triggered his second illegal attempt to reach Australia.

Gulistan Ali said he had paid "around $US9000" ($12,000) in total to people-smugglers since arriving in Indonesia early this year; another of the trio, Ahmad Ghahera, 25, said he paid about $US8000. Both men handed over most of that money on arrival in Jakarta, after flying from Kabul via Kuala Lumpur.

They had obtained visas from the Indonesian embassy in Kabul; there have been claims made of officials there providing the entry documents for up to $US1500. Indonesia's foreign ministry denies that allegation.

Gulistan Ali, who has a wife and two toddlers in Afghanistan, said he knew there was "less than a 50 per cent chance of succeeding, of not drowning" in the attempt to reach Ashmore Reef in Australia's northwestern waters, both in the one planned for this week and that of three months ago.

However, his life, he said, "is already ruined. Either I die - and I'm not concerned if that happens - or I secure a future for my children."

However, Gulistan Ali warned that even a figure as significant as Ali Cobra should not be seen as the end of the trail in the people-smuggling business operating out of Indonesia.

"It's a very organised mafia. But the organiser of it absolutely does not come before the people. They stay behind the curtain.

"I understand that people are very often cheated. They hand over their money and then the smugglers just report them to the authorities, to the police."

The majority of the $US9000 he had paid went, he claimed, to a smuggler "who has not been arrested". Also arrested this week in Jakarta was alleged people-smuggler Sajjad Hussein, thought to have been responsible for organising a boatload of asylum seekers intercepted in Australian waters on April 29.

Turnbull wants to visit injured asylum seekers


[Caption: Medical staff at Royal Darwin Hospital treat one of the asylum seekers. (Royal Darwin Hospital)]

The Federal Opposition Leader, Malcolm Turnbull, says he has requested to meet some of the asylum seekers who are being treated in the Darwin hospital.

Nine men are still in the hospital after last week's fatal explosion on a boat carrying asylum seekers from Afghanistan.

The blast, near Ashmore Reef, claimed the lives of five people and is the subject of an ongoing investigation by Northern Territory authorities.

Mr Turnbull has told ABC Radio in Darwin he will be visiting the hospital to thank the medical staff who helped treat the victims.

He says he wants to meet some of the asylum seekers too.

"I'd very much like to, but the question is whether that will be made available," he said.

"We have certainly [have] sought to do that but my understanding is that's not going to be possible."

For a larger image size..please click here...>>http://www.abc.net.au/news/stories/2009/04/23/2550589.htm

Asylum seekers caught in a boat blast off Australia's northwest coast have sustained injuries similar to those seen in the aftermath of the Bali bombi

Photgraph on the right:
{The boatload of suspected asylum seekers before yesterday's explosion. (AAP)}

The injured have been transferred to hospitals in Broome, Perth and Darwin after yesterday's explosion, which killed at least three and wounded many more.

The death toll is likely to rise with two of the asylum seekers, believed to be from Afghanistan, still missing.

Three of the 49 people on board, which included children and two crew members, died when the blast occurred about 6.30am WST (0830 AEST) near Ashmore Reef, 840km west of Darwin and 610km north of Broome.

About 30 people were badly injured.

The general manager of Royal Darwin Hospital, Dr Len Notaras, told ABC Radio that the the injuries suffered by the suspected asylum seekers are similar to those seen in the 2002 Bali bombings.

"They are not injuries that are far removed from the injuries we saw during the first Bali [bombing], to a certain extent the injuries we saw during some of the incidents that occurred in Timor," he said.

Up to four Royal Australian Navy personnel have less severe injuries.

West Australian Premier Colin Barnett said it was believed the boat was doused with petrol by those on board before the explosion occurred.

"What I think is clear is the refugees spread petrol on their boat, the vessel they were on," Mr Barnett told reporters.

"Whether they ignited it or it just ignited is unknown at this stage. But clearly that caused a major explosion."

Mr Barnett later issued a statement saying the information came from WA's emergency operations unit and was relayed from the Northern Command (NORCOM), which includes naval and defence force personnel.

"We understand that the incident requires investigation and that information will be collected in coming days," the statement said.

It took six hours before the federal government publicly commented on the incident, and Home Affairs Minister Bob Debus said it was too early to speculate on the cause of the explosion.

"I have spoken to the commander of border protection command and he says, again, that although it is likely that fuel was involved in the explosion on the boat he cannot say for certain it was and in consequence, of course, he cannot answer the question which everyone would like to know: `Was this an accident or was it sabotage?'," Mr Debus told ABC Television on Thursday night.

He earlier conceded it was possible it was caused by the asylum seekers dousing the boat with petrol.

"It is clearly a possibility that that is what occurred but we are not in the position to finally confirm whether that is so or not," he told reporters in Canberra.

Royal Australian Navy Rear Admiral Alan Du Toit, who attended the same news conference, confirmed that up to four Australian Defence Force personnel were aboard the vessel at the time of the explosion.

He said the boat was not (not) being refuelled at the time.

Rear Admiral Alan Du Toit also refused to speculate on the cause of the explosion.

"There may be speculation out there but clearly this will be subject to appropriate inquiries by the appropriate authorities," he said.

The boat was "freely drifting" under Australian supervision at the time of the explosion and was not being towed anywhere, he said.

Two navy patrol boats - HMAS Albany and HMAS Childers - were in the vicinity at the time of the explosion.

The boat, which was intercepted by border patrol units at about 8.30am (WST) on Wednesday, had been awaiting the arrival of a larger naval vessel so it could be escorted to Christmas Island.

It was the third boat of suspected asylum seekers to arrive in Australian waters in the past two weeks and the sixth this year.

The opposition blamed the government for the tragedy, saying it had created a "dangerous situation" that was always going to end in tragedy.

"You can't announce a soft policy and then expect people not to lose their lives through people smuggling efforts," opposition immigration spokeswoman Sharman Stone said.

"Perhaps we are going to see more of these tragedies in the coming weeks and months."

Mr Debus said Dr Stone should withdraw the comments.

"The last time people tried to make politics in an incident like this we had a most unpleasant circumstance in Australian national life," Mr Debus said, referring to the "children overboard" episode during John Howard's time in office.

"I do assure that the Rudd government is not going to be playing politics out of these kind of incidents.

"We are going to give you the truth and we are going to report to you accurately what is going on. We are not going to speculate and certainly we are not going to play that political card."

An offshore oil facility was being used as a triage centre for the injured, who were then being ferried by helicopter to the Truscott airbase, north of Kununurra in Western Australia's northwest.

The injured were then being transferred to hospitals on the mainland.

Those who were not injured were being taken in a naval vessel to Darwin as immigration officials decide how they should be treated.

Opposition Leader Malcolm Turnbull described the incident as a terrible tragedy, but also attacked the government over its policy for dealing with asylum seekers.

"There is no doubt the impression had been created that we are more accommodating, or taking a less hard line on people smuggling than we have in the past," Mr Turnbull told reporters in Brisbane.

But Mr Debus, who had just returned from a people smuggling conference in Bali, said push factors in countries like Afghanistan, Pakistan and Sri Lanka had resulted in a spike in illegal arrivals.

The government hoped Indonesia would toughen its people smuggling laws, to help address the problem, he said.

"We are hopeful that they will change a number of their laws, particularly the laws that affect people smuggling directly.

"But they are a sovereign nation and they will do so according to their own priorities."