News & Updates
Crayon debacle
12-01-2012 
Kids were turned away from Darwin Airport Lodge on Christmas Day because they tried to give gifts of crayons and textas to those in detention. 

Minister sends kids back to detention
16-12-2011 
ChilOut is appalled the Minister has revoked the community placement of 8 kids and sent them back to adult detention.

No hidden benefit in detaining children
16-11-2011 
Independent children's body critical of Inverbrackie detention centre. Access to health care and play is seriously questioned. ChilOut speaks out.

Online donations
15-11-2011 
ChilOut now has an online donation facility. Click here to make a donation.

Deterring People Smuggling Bill. Senate Inquiry
10-11-2011 
ChilOut has met the super tight timeframe on this one. If passed, this Bill could see refugees and asylum seekers suffer further. There is no international precedence for this.

The Recent High Court Ruling
13-09-2011 

We congratulate David Manne and the RILC team for bringing this case for two Afghan plaintiffs, one adult and one 16 year old, before the High Court.



CLICK HERE for more information


A New Approach. Breaking the Stalemate on Refugees and Asylum Seekers
06-09-2011 
ChilOut Chair, Kate Gauthier has contributed to a major report strongly supporting calls to reframe the debate around refugee issues.


Click here for the full report

ChilOut flyer and E-card
14-03-2011 
Chilout has produced a flyer and e-card.  Click here to get the PDF to print or e-card to email around


Archive
Myths & facts

Myths about asylum seekers busted; GetUp!

Offshore processing is costing about $1 million a day. Watch video

 

Facts about refugees around the world

Asks the question "What kind of nation are we?" Watch video

 

But they're "illegal" , "they're a security threat" , "there's too many of them" , "why don't they just come the right way?"

These are not uncommon remarks posed to the ChilOut team. There is so much misinformation out there and almost no effort by our political leaders to add factual, rationale information to the public debate. So, here a few myths busted to help make sense of it all...


But there's a flood. It's more like a trickle - t he numbers in Australia are very small. In 2010 Australia received around 1 percent of the world's asylum claims. In the first of 2011 we received 4,955 asylum applications (by plane and sea), in the same period the USA received 36,370 applications, with France, Germany, the UK, Sweden, Italy, Belgium and Canada all receiving over 10,000 applications in the same 6 month period (some over 20,000). Furthermore, Australia has a quota and only accepts14,750 humanitarian entrants each year. UNHCR October 18, 2011 report.

They jumped the queue There simply is no queue. Less than 30% of the world's 15.4 million refugees live in refugee camps. The remainder are in urban settings, on the move, in informal camps, living precariously in countries near to their homelands etc... For people coming from Afghanistan, Iran, Iraq, Sri Lanka or Burma there is no country between their homes and Australia who is a signatory to the Refugee Convention. This means there is nowhere for them to gain protection, safety and legal status. It is not illegal to seek asylum without a visa. 

Safety first   Rigorous Australian government security checks are applied before asylum seekers are granted refugee status. They are fleeing from security threats, not creating new ones. It's worth noting that if someone arrives by plane and seeks asylum (more common historically than arriving by boat) -  they are usually not detained whilst awaiting refugee status determination or an ASIO check.   

They're illegal  F leeing persecution is not a crime. In fact, seeking asylum is a human right. It is not illegal to seek asylum without a visa. Around 80 percent of asylum seekers who come to Australia by boat are found to be refugees. How can a person fleeing their own Government stop by the office of a bureaucrat and fill out a visa application form?

They just want a better life. People who apply for asylum have been forced to flee their homelands. They have faced persecution, imprisonment, possibly the threat of death or seen loved ones killed. Their governments can no longer protect them. Nearly half of all refuges are children (44 percent). Australia's refugee determination test is a rigorous one and to pass means a person faces a genuine threat of persecution.

What about my taxes  When anyone is granted permanent residency, they have exactly the same rights and obligations as the rest of us - like obeying Australian laws and paying Australian taxes. Detention costs are an enormous burden to the Australian taxpayer not former refugees living in and contributing to our communities. 

A long and proud history   Refugee arrivals are nothing new. In Australia, we have a long and proud history of protecting those fleeing persecution. Since Federation, we have accepted more than 750 000; these have included people like scientist Dr Karl Kuszelnicki and Westfield founder and Socceroos head Frank Lowy.

All these boats...   In truth, there are not that many. See the first answer above for the latest numbers. And don't forget, more asylum seekers come to Australia by plane than by boat (and the vast majority of plane arrivals are not detained at all). 

Our cities are already splitting at the seams. We can't take any more...  It sometimes seems that way, but this has nothing to do with people who apply for asylum. Every year, our population increases by around 300 000 - these people account for only 2 497 (that's less than one percent).

But don't we get to decide who comes in?   We do. Almost everyone who comes here does so by the usual migration channels. Everyone who applies for asylum is individually assessed by the Australian Government. Remember, only people who can prove that they were fleeing from persecution get a visa.

But I just got an email saying these people get higher benefits than us
These are hoax emails, full of false information. These e-mails are blatantly inaccurate and intended to create resentment towards refugees and fuel disharmony. To find out the truth,
click here .

The Refugee Council of Australia also has a myths and facts page


And, here's the myths and facts from the Australian Parliamentary library.