‘To the outside world
looking in—indeed, to most countries that deal with tens of thousands
of refugees annually—it may have seemed outright puzzling. When John
Key stepped up to the lectern of his press conference and announced
he was introducing mandatory group detention for ‘mass’ boat-arriving
asylum seekers to Kiwi shores, there was one confounding detail missing.
New Zealand has never had a boatload of asylum seekers in modern
history. None.’
Why would a country
that has never had a boatload of asylum arrivals suddenly legislate
for mass detention? Geographically isolated and previously a world
leader in fair treatment of refugees, New Zealand has abruptly
changed tack.
Treading across the
refugee camps of Burma and Thailand, to Australia’s detention centres
and back to New Zealand, columnist Tracey Barnett looks hard at this
controversial new policy. She speaks to asylum seekers, refugees, NGO
workers and migrants – people on the move and on the ground. Their
lives and stories reveal a reality far more complex than the
political rhetoric, and one that questions just how fair and ethical
New Zealand really is on the world stage today.
Author
Information
Tracey Barnett
has been a contributing columnist for The New Zealand Herald, The
Sunday Star Times, The Christchurch Press and The
Listener, among others. She is an occasional television and radio
commentator for TV3’s Campbell Live, Three60, Radio Live and formerly
Media 3. Her commentary work has been published in ten countries.
Tracey has also
written and spoken against instituting mandatory detention of asylum
seekers in New Zealand and created the campaign, “We Are Better Than
That”. She is an advocate for pursuing an independent policy course
on refugee issues from our Australian neighbours.
Publishing 5
December 2013, RRP$4.99, ISBN 9781927131909 (EPUB), 9781927131916
(KINDLE), 9781927277983 (PDF)
Available
direct from www.bwb.co.nz and
from major retailers including Amazon, Kobo and eBooks.com.
For more information about BWB Texts - website.
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