calendar >>>
> german ameri
> ee82hl
> udx5ugbmaj
> udx5ugbmaj
> udx5ugbmaj
add an event >>>
features
   anti-war
   migration
   climate change
   ecology
   students
   work
   health
   gender
   culture
   indymedia
   global news
   anti-nuclear
   anti-racism
   civil liberties
   anti-corporate
   miscellaneous
   social movements

 

announcements list
contributors list

about us
   contact
   get involved
   support us
   editorial policy

resources
   activist groups
   syndication
   links

radio
podcast

engagemedia

search


themes
   white theme black theme




 

 

 


printable version - email this article

Thanks for the refugee camps, Nauru, how would you like to be Australian?
by Sydney Morning Herald Saturday December 20, 2003 at 10:27 PM

Mark Forbes in Nadi - December 19, 2003 / Nauru's entire population could be offered Australian citizenship and resettlement under a proposal being developed by the Howard Government. [..]

Thanks for the refug...
nauru-map.gif, image/gif, 512x611

The Foreign Minister, Alexander Downer, has ordered his department to draw up options for the future of the tiny island state, which officials believe will not be viable after Australian payments to maintain camps for asylum seekers end.

Offering citizenship to the more than 12,000 Nauruans is one option. Others include granting Nauru an uninhabited Pacific island or a restructuring of its finances and increased long-term Australian help.

Granting Nauruans an island is highly improbable, Mr Downer believes, but he told the Herald that Nauru was confronting difficulties that could not be ignored. "We can't just abandon Nauru. We can't let the 10,000 people in Nauru not have any fresh water or electricity."

Mr Downer doubted that Nauruans could be offered a part of Australia to settle on unless they became citizens. But citizenship was not the most likely option because of Nauruan resistance and the precedent it would set for immigration laws. As well, Nauruans loved their country and did not want to leave.

But Australian officials believe the country is almost unsustainable. It lacks fresh water, vegetables and reliable power and has been kept running only by the $30 million in funding over the past two years to maintain the detention camps as part of the 'Pacific solution'.

Australia administered Nauru until 1968 and would continue to be asked to prop it up. In the long run it would be cheaper to ensure a long-term solution.

The phosphate that once made Nauru's population the world's second-richest is gone, and mining has devastated about 80 per cent of its 21 square kilometres.

The Government identifies Nauru as Australia's next priority in the Pacific after the intervention in the Solomon Islands and the $2.5 billion, five-year rescue for Papua New Guinea.

Officials have been ordered to finalise a proposal for Nauru by the end of January.

Mr Downer said Australia was taking a more robust approach in the Pacific because of the risks of having failed states nearby.

An offer of Australian citizenship would allow Nauruans to gradually leave their island, or stay if they wished. The proposal is also intended to prompt Nauru's Government to face the nation's long-term crisis.

Nauru's President, Rene Harris, volunteered to detain asylum seekers during the 2001 Tampa crisis. About 300 remain, with about 35 on a hunger strike and demanding to be sent to Australia.

Mr Harris obtained the $30 million in Australian assistance in return for hosting the camps over the past two years and Australia wants to extend the agreement for at least another year.

Australia also provides about $3 million in regular annual aid, and will give $2.5 million for the next 10 years in compensation for the phosphate exploitation.

Despite, or perhaps because of, its phosphate bonanza, Nauru has been dogged by instability and corruption. With the added burden of poor investments, it is now effectively bankrupt.

add your comments


Nauru from top
by Sydney Morning Herald Saturday December 20, 2003 at 10:27 PM

Nauru from top...
nauru.jpg, image/jpeg, 293x326

add your comments


Nauru from air
by Sydney Morning Herald Saturday December 20, 2003 at 10:27 PM

Nauru from air...
nauru2.jpg, image/jpeg, 259x171

add your comments


Phosphate mining
by Sydney Morning Herald Saturday December 20, 2003 at 10:27 PM

Phosphate mining...
nauru3.jpg, image/jpeg, 411x293

add your comments


Melbourne Indymedia is a website produced by grassroots media makers offering non-corporate coverage of struggles, actions and celebrations. Everyone is a witness. Everyone is a journalist.
N© Melbourne Independent Media Center. Unless otherwise stated by the author, all content is free for non-commercial reuse, reprint, and rebroadcast, on the net and elsewhere. Opinions are those of the contributors and are not necessarily endorsed by the Melbourne Independent Media Center.