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Ignorance is bliss

by
September 2005, no. 274

Following Them Home: The fate of the returned asylum seekers by David Corlett

Black Inc., $24.95 pb, 222 pp

Ignorance is bliss

by
September 2005, no. 274

The federal government maintains that it has no obligation to monitor the fate of non-citizens removed from Australia’s shores. In fact, it argues that it is better not to monitor returnees, since surveillance by a Western government might put them at greater risk. In certain circumstances this may be true: in a theocracy such as Iran, for example, where the very act of leaving renders a citizen suspect. In the main, however, the government’s argument is self-serving. The fate of Australian citizen Vivian Alvarez Solon, left to decline slowly in a Philippines hospice, shines a more revealing light on policy. It shows that Australian authorities have cultivated a determined indifference to the fate of deportees on the basis that ignorance is bliss. No care, no responsibility.

Peter Mares reviews ‘Following Them Home: The fate of the returned asylum seekers’ by David Corlett

Following Them Home: The fate of the returned asylum seekers

by David Corlett

Black Inc., $24.95 pb, 222 pp

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