From: Maureen Brannan
Sent: Friday, September 02, 2016 12:30 PM
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Subject: A Refugee Resettlement Strategy Proposal
“In My
Name” - A Refugee Resettlement Strategy
(4) Detention costs - Refugee Action Coalition Sent to:
Our governments
suffer from a near criminal lack of imagination concerning the current
humanitarian crisis of overwhelming and every-increasing numbers of displaced
people on the move in the world, whether fleeing from war zones, cruel
persecution, intractable extreme poverty or weather/climate environmental
disruptions.
I have been
working on a practical strategy for resettling refugees in Australia whilst
living off-grid on a SE Queensland bush property for the past 20 years,
researching and practising all things permaculture(1), and have developed a
comprehensive plan for a village-scale settlement of discrete encampment
modules, run by two Matriarchs.(2)
Governments could
establish these regional/rural Refugee Villages (I prefer the term: Transitional
Off-grid Encampments for Displaced People) very economically using their
capacity to employ economies of scale – local industries would benefit greatly,
eg building the big sheds (open on 2-sides), the water tanks and pumps, the
bespoke 12 berth caravans, the tubular-metal bunk beds and bedding, the patio
kitchen, shower and washing blocks, the gas bottles and refills, the generators,
the decking, the Clivus Multrum-style Compost Toilets, potentially built with 3D
technology(3), and supplying the 12-seater vehicles. It expands into retrofitted
raised garden beds to provide a daily fruit & green-pick, and lastly
broadening out into a small holding permaculture model for family & extended
family groups, overseen I propose by our two foremost p/c gurus, Josh Byrne of
Gardening Australia and Geoff Lawton of The Permaculture Research
Institute.
The model can also
be specifically adapted for a number of other applications; discrete Aboriginal
communities on homelands, Bush Ranger camps, Youth Rehabilitation Camps,
Homeless Sanctuaries and Precincts, etc.
The plan has unlimited potential to revitalise ailing communities
economically and socially and to restore people’s faith in humanity, confidence
and trust that has been significantly damaged by this government’s cruel
treatment of asylum seekers held in detention on Nauru and Manus Island.
As with Labor, I
also agree that it is essential that the boat ‘turn-back’ regime is kept in place for the time being, not to “keep
our borders safe” but purely to stop unsafe sea voyages. I strongly condemn
offshore detention however, along with the vast majority of Australians - it is
clearly immoral to spend over a billion dollars of taxpayers’ money every year
(4) to further punishing already anxiety-ridden, depressed and traumatised
people, and it is demonstrably unnecessary to maintain a deterrent to people
smugglers.
A broader policy could establish
well-resourced regional processing centres for asylum seekers
in strategic places in South East Asia to expeditiously determine those in
greatest needs of protection, in collaboration with the sovereign country’s
governments. All
those found to meet the very strict requirements for refugee status, could then
be offered a range of re-settlement options of varying time-frames, according to
their wishes - a temporary one where people simply wish for protection, ie if
they wish to return home when conditions allow, or if they are simply unsure at
that stage, or a permanent re-settlement option via this transitional model
where people wish to become a citizens of Australia - the initial encampment
template is the same, except for the terms of the contract people would be
expected to sign with the government.
Where refugees already have family in Australia who undertake
responsibility to support them, people could move directly into the community.
Where there is no such social support already in place, one choice people could
be offered, is to live in a regional or rural village situated near a Volunteer
Town who agrees to host the new settlement, with generous incentives offered by
government – the adults only camps could be situated in regions where seasonal
farm work is available.
All that is required for the footprint of these villages is around
100 acres of cleared land with road access and a permanent water source. There are thousands of acres of farming and
grazing-degraded land around many towns, country that no-one wants to take
responsibility for to rehabilitate back to productive use, either for growing
food or for restoring wildlife habitat in areas where ecosystems are endangered
– this is one way to effectively utilise that land. People who accept this option will be
expected to sign a one year contract with the government, committing to an
8-hour day, 5-day week of work and/or study. Correspondence educational courses
can be tailored to the individual needs of each adult and child. Penalties for
breaking the contract will of course be strictly adhered to.
The village is set up in encampment modules, one for two matriarchs
(with or without a partner) and children, and one for adult workers, to
accommodate an average of 12 individuals (but with flexible accommodation for
more), composed of one large shed open on two sides (around $15,000), a 12-berth
bespoke caravan, a wooden deck to accommodate a kitchen, ablutions block/compost
toilet and extra bunk beds, two large water tanks, one for potable rainwater,
collected from the roof of the shed, the other for all other uses including
washing and watering the gardens, to be filled from the permanent water source.
Around one side of the shed rows of
garden beds under shade cloth can be retrofitted and seed and plant stock
provided to make a substantial supplement to their diets with fresh nutritious
food. Provisions can be delivered weekly according to a menu plan managed by the
matriarchs. The encampments are powered by tri-generation; solar panels and wind
turbines on the roof, with a bio-diesel generator back-up.
I am proposing two models of ‘autonomous’ encampments, one for
adult workers, and one for children and two matriarchs, whose main job is to
manage the cooking and cleaning, and the
children’s correspondence schooling (educational modules also for the adults,
tailored to each person’s level of need), keeping family groups together wherever possible. The adult
camps would be available for any local seasonal farm work, working bees with
volunteer organisations, or environmental projects etc.
Many refugees, especially from Asia, already have multiple skills
in building and food growing, and as a later iteration of this scheme, our
leading permaculturalists (Geoff Lawson and Josh Byrne being two experts in the
field) could draw up a plan whereby our new Australians can build their own
earth-insulated homes, perhaps utilising tyres from dangerous dumps, locking in
that carbon instead of risking huge polluting fires. I myself have plans to ABA standards for a
5-bedroom coursed adobe dwelling that can be owner-built and furnished for
around $50,000.(5 Worldatpolarity.blogspot-5bedroom longhouse) They could become
mostly self-sufficient in their own food requirements within ten years, at which
time they will be well integrated into Australian society and contributing to
the local community and economy. P/c models adapted to the specific local
conditions could be rolled out across regional, rural and remote Australia,
especially to set up Aboriginal homeland communities integrated with the Ranger
Program; endangered plants and wildlife will also benefit as p/c integrates with
bush tucker and the restoration of biodiverse habitat.
Permaculture settlement models have been tried and tested for
decades, evolving with the latest technologies and informed by world’s best
practice and Indigenous wisdom, and have been proven to work exceptionally well;
this is evidenced by the expanding number of successful ones in Australia and
around the world. It would cost far
less than resettling people in other countries or condemning them to the hell of
indefinite off-shore detention.
I have
drawn up a plan for this encampment model, right down to the finest detail and
can provide full costings for the government – it would not cost a lot to
finance a prototype, which I am ‘shovel ready’ to set up right now on the 40
acres of land I live on. I imagine the
Coalition would take a lot of persuading but I believe Labor may be more
amenable. I think the Australian people would get behind such a scheme though,
as the good people of many towns have already demonstrated their willingness to
embrace refugees.
This program could effectively and productively resettle tens of
thousands of refugees in the near future – many larger towns could easily absorb
a thousand or more each, with only positive benefits; it would reinvigorating
their society with able workers, grateful for the opportunity to have a safe,
secure and happy future for themselves and their children.
If the government continues with its current asylum-seeker
detention and resettlement in another country policy that denies people even the
most basic human dignity, when alternatives such as this are eminently and
demonstrably viable, I can foresee a time when the UN Criminal Courts will have
no option but to prosecute them for cruelty and inhumanity towards some of the
most traumatised and disadvantaged people on Earth. I personally believe it
exposes depraved minds that would choose such cruel fates for people seeking
asylum who have already suffered immensely.
…………………………………………………
Maureen
Brannan
905
Wilsons Road CLOYNA Q 4605 ph: 0427710523 email: mbrannan4@bigpond.com
(1) Permaculture integrates
with and enhances the biodiversity of the surrounding native habitat with
horticulture of endemic foods and medicines. There are innumerable successful
long-established p/c communities in Australia, such as CERES in Melbourne, and
villages such as Crystal Waters Ecovillage, and thousands around the world prove
the concept sound and truly durable,
socially economically and environmentally, over the long term.
(2)’Matriarchs’ are fit and
healthy mothers and grandmothers who have had a lifetime of experience providing
for children and large extended families, who have all the skills necessary to
manage a household, skills in preparing healthy, nutritious meals for many
people, who can provide the government with a list of weekly food and provisions
requirements for menus prepared with the assistance of nutritionists, skills in
caring for pregnant women and babies and skills in tutoring children.
(Correspondence schooling tailored to each individual collaborating with local
schools and colleges.) I am preparing a
Matriarch Education Course to send to the world’s refugee camps so people can
organise themselves into small groups and prepare for relocation to Australia or
another country who adopts a similar scheme. If nothing else, it would give them
some dreams and aspirations for a brighter future.
(3)A
3D printer to turn waste plastic into composting toilets, rainwater harvesting
systems http://www.kurzweilai.net/a-3d-printer-to-turn-waste-plastic-into-composting-toilets-rainwater-harvesting-systems
(4) Detention costs - Refugee Action Coalition Sent to:
Posted on the PM’s contact page: https://www.pm.gov.au/contact-your-pm
Refugee
Council of Australia: media@refugeecouncil.org.au
OHCHR
(Office
of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights):
infodesk@ohchr.org
South Burnett Regional Council Mayor: mayor@southburnett.qld.gov.au
The Koori Mail: editor@koorimail.com
Leader of The Greens Richard Di Natale: senator.dinatale@aph.gov.au
Deputy
Greens Leader Senator Larissa Waters: senator.waters@aph.gov.au
Crickey Story Submission:
boss@crikey.com.au
TV Channel 10 (Waleed Ali at The Project) - stories@theprojecttv.com