Gajalakshmi Paramasivam
10
August 2018
Foreign Judgment on
Australians?
[I visited 14 prisons
across Australia, and heard story after story of Indigenous people
with disabilities, whose lives have been cycles of abuse and imprisonment, without
effective support. The result is Australia’s prisons are disproportionately full of Indigenous people.] Kriti Sharma of
Human Rights Watch – in her report ‘The Nightmare Lives of Indigenous Prisoners in Australia’
Taken as a community, Indigenous Australians have
also committed similar atrocities. Magistrate Pat O’Shane – of the Indigenous
community for example unlawfully ordered me to go to prison for one year . The alleged offence
was Trespass. I had the lawful right to be at the University of NSW. But the Indigenous
lady sent me to prison – not caring about my rights as an Australian and the
disability as a current migrant. In prison, other female prisoners – Indigenous
as well as Non-Indigenous, shared their experiences with me. None of the
Indigenous Australian prisoners complained of discrimination. Hence I do not
identify with the above report. Taken as a community – perpetrators dilute the
victims’ entitlements.
I find the report unreliable – due to lack of commonness
felt with the prisoners. Dr Kriti Sharma, is an outsider to the Australian
system. I lived and worked as an Australian and endured pain as an Australian
worker, to have the subjective connection
and the authority to criticize my seniors in the Australian system. Outsiders
have no right to publish outcomes – without independent, public, objectively
measurable outcomes produced by us. The methodology is seriously flawed.
Human Rights Watch expresses opinions on Sri Lankan
war outcomes also. The evidence regarding the internal outcomes during the 2009
war were passed on by Sinhalese soldiers who had positive humanitarian value.
Tamil soldiers have failed to demonstrate similar shame about their side. It is
when we identify with our own weaknesses that we have recourse to lasting
solution.
We have the duty to wait until Indigenous
Australians reveal the suffering of their community prisoners. It is a human
right that we are all entitled to. The entitlement is developed through shared
ownership. When I was unjustly sent to prison and was labelled as a mentally
ill person – only my immediate family supported me. The Australian Tamil
community did not. They probably considered the suffering of refugees to be
greater than mine. But to me the Truth is that our pain is relative to our
investment in the issue – in this instance our sense of independence/sovereignty.
If the suffering of Indigenous Australians is
greater than that of the Tamil refugees – then Australian Tamil leaders have
the duty to discourage Indigenous Tamils from
coming to Australia and not
complain when they are sent back to Sri Lanka. Since they do complain – one is
entitled to conclude that with all its faults – Australia is a better place for
Indigenous communities than Sri Lanka. Human Rights evaluations by outsiders need
to be done in a global context – through global principles and not on one to
one basis.
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