"Australia is the only developed country to lock up those who apply for 
asylum. [...Those who are accorded refugee status] are granted only 
three-year temporary protection visas. They cannot get access to full 
benefits, they have no right to English language classes and they cannot 
bring over the families they have left behind."

 From http://www.guardian.co.uk

Hazardous, long and costly: the refugees' lonely odyssey
Only the smugglers are certain winners in the escape business
Rory McCarthy in Peshawar,  John Aglionby  in Dili and Patrick Barkham in 
Sydney
Friday August 31 2001
The Guardian


Deep in the maze of teeming bazaars to the north of Peshawar, where they 
sell stolen televisions, large blocks of hashish and cheap Kalashnikov 
assault rifles, is a new breed of travel agents. Their business is 
discreet, effective and illegal, and the profits are enormous.

One young, bearded Afghan agent slips away from his office above a row of 
paint shops and, sitting nervously in the back of a car, slowly starts to 
talk about his work as a kachakbar,  a refugee smuggler.

Just a few weeks ago the hundreds of Afghan refugees now stranded on the 
Tampa cargo ship off Christmas Island in Australian waters sat in secret in 
Peshawar and met smugglers just like him. They borrowed a small fortune 
from their relatives and signed contracts which promised to whisk them away 
from the squalid refugee camps of Pakistan's North West Frontier and 
deposit them in front of an Australian immigration desk.

The smuggler said the going rate was $12,000 (about £8,200) per 
person. Oh, and two passport-sized photographs. "Then we will sign a 
contract guaranteeing to get you to Australia. There is almost no risk at 
all."

The journey begins in Afghanistan, where in the past two decades more than 
6m people have left their country to escape war. Hundreds of thousands more 
have poured out in the last year in a sudden exodus to flee a new burst of 
fighting, a vicious drought and the ever more brutal Taliban regime. They 
stream across the border at the Khyber Pass with no passports and in the 
refugee camps around Peshawar quickly meet the kachakbar agents who fill 
them with promises of a new life in the west.

"First they need a Pakistani passport and we can get them one very easily," 
said the smuggler. "Then we get a visa. Sometimes we get a fake British or 
American visa but these are the expensive routes. Most people now want to 
go through Thailand or Indonesia and these visas are easy."

The refugee smuggling business is a sophisticated, well-oiled operation. 
Most smugglers have a travel agent's licence and senior contacts among the 
Pakistani authorities. Prices vary depending on the destination and the 
ease of the journey. The smugglers take a handsome 40% profit.

For most Afghan families the cost of escape is crippling. One father, 
Mohammad, who lives in a camp in Peshawar, has just sent his 15-year-old 
son through a smuggler to London. It was a cheap ticket, and at £6,000 
was all the family could afford. The journey took one year and 14 days.

"I know he went to Iran and then I think he went to Russia but I don't know 
how he got to London. I don't even know what kind of passport he has now. 
What kind of journey is that to send a 15-year-old boy on?" he asks in 
broken English.

"We simply didn't have a choice. The house we had in Kabul for 100 years we 
sold to send my son to England to study. We sold a house that we didn't 
want to sell even for a million dollars. If you knew the difficulties of 
the Afghans you would cry."

The Afghans on board the Tampa would have deposited the fee with a third 
person, usually a money changer who will only pay the smuggler once the 
refugee telephones to confirm safe arrival.

For two days the refugees practise their stories. "We tell them to say they 
come from a part of Afghanistan ruled by the Taliban and that the Taliban 
have imposed all these laws and created serious problems," said the 
smuggler. "Most people are genuine cases but some of them are not even 
Afghans, they are Pakistanis, Kashmiris, even Chechens. People in the west 
don't know the difference."

At Karachi airport, officials are bribed and refugees bound for Australia 
board flights to Jakarta, Kuala Lumpur or Singapore. A smuggler's agent 
flies with them and just before they reach immigration he takes their 
passports and disappears.

Suddenly the Afghans drop into a foreign world filled with Iraqis, Sri 
Lankans, Pakistanis and refugees from across the globe desperate to reach 
Australia. Most head to the Indonesian island of Lombok to wait for the 
final crossing, many get no further.

A year ago Awarli left Iraq with his wife, three children and 
mother-in-law. They crossed into Pakistan, flew to the Malaysian capital 
Kuala Lumpur and were taken to the west coast by a smuggler. They thought 
they would be travelling alone but when they reached the coast the 
converted fishing boat was already full.

"There were 17 of us," he said. "We were put on a small boat, only about 
six metres [16 feet] long. It was dark, the weather was bad. We knew that 
it was dangerous on the boat but what can we do? We need our freedom."

They were lucky and made it to Medan, a city in north Sumatra. Many others 
have perished attempting to cross the Malacca Strait on boats that are 
overcrowded and barely seaworthy. They then went by bus to Jakarta and 
waited in a backpackers' hotel, eating at the McDonald's restaurant 
directly opposite the UN building.

"We were then told there was a boat for us so we went to south Java coast," 
Awarli said. "But we have no luck. The first boat never arrived and the 
second boat had to turn back." So they moved east, first to the city of 
Surabaya and then on to Bali. But still no boat.

"Then we were told of possibility on Lombok so we come here and get 
arrested." The entire journey has cost £14,000 and now the family are 
holed up in the Nusantara I guesthouse in Lombok along with 126 other 
illegal migrants waiting to be processed by the UN High Commissioner for 
Refugees (UNHCR).

"Our money is almost gone and also our hope," Awarli said. "We know not 
what will happen to us."

Since the people smuggling business took off a year ago, 492 asylum seekers 
have been caught in Indonesia and classified by the UNHCR as refugees. But 
only 19 have been found new homes. Another 632 asylum seekers who were 
arrested did not qualify as refugees and so are given nothing and live in 
squalid detention centres.

Lombok is an increasingly popular jumping off post for Australia, according 
to the local police spokeswoman, Assistant Commander Sri Budi Pangistuti. 
"We have caught 251 people this year," she said, "and most have been in the 
last few months. The vast majority are from Iraq and Afghanistan."

It is easy to see why so many take the risk. Australia's minister of 
immigration, Philip Ruddock, said recently that only 14% of the Afghans 
assessed in Indonesia were given refugee status while the corresponding 
figure for Australia was more than 80%.

Indonesian police are catching only a fraction of illegal migrants. Awarli 
said there were about 300 people in his group. "I know not where the others 
are now," he said, adding with a sudden flash of humour, "and I know not 
where I will be next month."

 From Indonesia a small but steady stream of boats ferries asylum seekers 
to Australia's beautiful and desolate northern beaches. More than 4,000 
made it in the past year alone and more are expected in the coming months 
as the weather improves.

Most of the vessels are tiny antiquated fishing boats or inter-island 
ferries like the 20m-long boat from which the 433 asylum seekers were 
rescued by the Tampa on Sunday night. Two such ships sank when they were 
caught in the aftermath of Cyclone Sam last December, drowning 167 asylum 
seekers from the Middle East. Australian authorities believe up to 400 
other migrants have drowned this year.

The goal of the refugee smugglers is not to complete the hazardous 
three-day crossing to mainland Australia undetected, but to be picked up by 
the authorities at one of the country's remote territorial outposts - 
either Christmas Island, 970 miles west of the mainland, or Ashmore Reef, a 
scattering of small sandy atolls 200 miles from Australia's north west coast.

Most of the sailors are young Indonesians, perhaps unaware of the 20-year 
prison sentences that await them if they are caught. For the asylum 
seekers, the arduous journey from their homes ends in a hot, remote 
detention centre in the Australian outback. Australia is the only developed 
country to lock up those who apply for asylum.


Isolated

Once arrested, asylum seekers are flown to the three most isolated of 
Australia's six detention centres, Port Hedland, Curtin and Woomera, where 
they are interviewed and searched. "Unless people start burning buildings, 
we don't have an idea of what is going on in Curtin or Woomera," said 
Graham Thom of Amnesty International.

Rahmon, an Afghan, was one of the lucky ones. It took him six months to 
flee from the Panjsher Valley, in opposition territory in Afghanistan, to 
Australia, where he was detained for two months at Port Hedland.

Arrested and tortured by the Taliban, he was released from a Kabul prison 
after paying a bribe. He scraped together US$4,000 and fled to Pakistan. 
Given a fake passport by smugglers, he took a plane via Singapore to 
Indonesia, where he waited for 20 days before crossing to Australia.

"I proved that I was a genuine refugee and I proved that I was from the 
Panjsher Valley," he told ABC radio. "The people who interviewed me were 
very knowledgeable about the situation in Afghanistan and that's why after 
two months they have released us."

Most, however, wait many more months in a labyrinthine process of appeals. 
More than 80% are eventually found to be genuine refugees and yet the 
government regularly leaves unfilled its humanitarian quotas. Last year 
2,040 unfilled places from the resettlement programme were carried over to 
the next year.

Yet life in the new world is not quite as the Afghans imagined when they 
sat in Peshawar listening to the gilded promises of the smugglers. Refugees 
like Rahmon, who now works in a factory in Sydney, are granted only 
three-year temporary protection visas. They cannot get access to full 
benefits, they have no right to English language classes and they cannot 
bring over the families they have left behind. It will take months to pay 
back their relatives and most simply melt away into the ethnic ghettos of 
industrial Sydney or Melbourne.

--------


Related stories
   31.08.2001: UN human rights chief condemns Australia
   31.08.2001: More than 90% vote in East Timor polls
   30.08.2001: UN calls for Australia to admit refugees
  30.08.2001: Australians ignore plea on refugees
  30.08.2001: What the Australian papers say
   30.08.2001: Diplomatic game with no ground rules
30.08.2001: Not such a lucky country for some
   29.08.2001: Stranded refugees on hunger strike
   29.08.2001: Why they risk journey into danger

Audio
30.08.2001: Patrick Barkham in Australia (3mins 33)
   29.08.2001: Patrick Barkham in Australia (2mins 33)
   28.08.2001: John Aglionby in Indonesia (3mins 5)

Useful links
UN High Commissioner for Refugees
Australian Immigration Department
   Government of Australia
   Afghanistan government
   Afghan news network
   Sydney Morning Herald
Tampa owners' virtual ship's tour
  Unofficial Australian SAS page
  Australian government immigration campaign

Interactive guide
   Where do refugees go in the world

Copyright Guardian Newspapers Limited

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