Australia produces fake horoscopes to deter Lankan asylum seekers from trying to reach its shores

Saturday, 21 December 2019 01:13 -     - {{hitsCtrl.values.hits}}

  • Home Office chart paints a painfully foreboding future of shame, legal troubles, people smugglers stealing money, and even the loss of wives’ jewellery
  • Australia has invested considerable resources in Facebook advertisements, brochures and even graphic novels aimed at dissuading migrants and asylum seekers 

 

SCMP: Horoscopes can be harsh – but the ones that the Australian Government wrote to deter Sri Lankan migrants and asylums seekers are really, really dark.

A Cancer? “Family problems will occur,” the Australian Government predicted. “Luck is not in the cards for you. Do not try to travel illegally to Australia by boat, as you will be stopped and returned. You will lose everything your family owes to debt, and face family problems.”

A Sagittarius? “You will be in debt forever,” read the result. “If you illegally travel to Australia by boat you will be returned. Everything you risked to get there will be in vain and you will end up owing everyone.”

The fake horoscope chart, first obtained and reported on by BuzzFeed News through a freedom of information request, paints a painfully foreboding future of shame, legal troubles, people smugglers stealing money, and even the loss of wives’ jewellery (the latter afflicting Geminis).

But perhaps even wilder, and darker, is that while Australia’s Home Office itself devised these English-language brochures predicting doom and gloom at sea, at least a dozen people have died in custody since 2013 at Australia’s offshore detention centres for migrants and asylum seekers. It’s unclear exactly when these fake horoscopes were produced, at what cost, and where and how they were distributed. Australia’s Department of Home Affairs did not respond to requests for clarification. The pamphlet ended with a reminder that this is “a message by the Australian Government” and directed readers to a Government website with similarly harsh messaging against illegal immigration. Australia has invested considerable resources in Facebook advertisements, brochures and even graphic novels aimed at deterring migrants and asylum seekers from illegally trying to reach its shores. In one reported case, between February and June 2017 the Australian Government paid a Singapore-based company, Statt Consulting, at least $ 15 million to target Afghanistan and Pakistan with advertisements dissuading would-be asylum seekers from making the journey.

At the same time, Australia has imposed harsh anti-migrant measures and maintained dire conditions at the country’s detention centres for those who did make it by boat.

Since 2013, Australia has detained about 4,000 migrants and asylum seekers in offshore processing centres on two islands: Nauru, a desolate and tiny South Pacific state, and Manus Island, which belongs to Papua New Guinea. The Manus detention centre was formally closed in 2017. Conditions have been reported as depressing, even deadly. In one of the dozen cases of deaths in Australian custody since 2013, Hamid Khazaei, an Iranian asylum seeker, died in 2014 after contracting a food infection that was improperly treated and left him brain-dead. The Australian coroner’s report into his death faulted the clinic on Manus Island for not providing better care.

Children held in these detention centres reported suicide attempts and symptoms of “resignation syndrome”, in which afflicted people become so distraught and withdrawn that they stop communicating with the outside world.

Under pressure from refugee advocates, Australia has since relocated many asylum seekers, including all children, to the United States, although hundreds of adults remain. In December, the Australian Government blocked a program to transfer sick detainees to Australian hospitals for better care. In May, Australians re-elected Prime Minister Scott Morrison, an advocate of harsh anti-immigrant policies who, in a previous post as immigration minister, devised the country’s current offshore detention model.

(Source URL: https://scmp.com/news/asia/south-asia/article/3042789/australia-produced-fake-horoscopes-deter-sri-lankan-asylum)

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