From the BBC:
“'Fortress Australia': Why
calls to open up borders are meeting resistance”
Australia has been one of the
world's Covid success stories, where infection rates are near zero and life
mostly goes on as normal. That's in large part thanks to the early move to shut
its borders - a policy that has consistently been supported by the public. But
after a year in the cocoon, there is growing unease in the country over the
so-called "Fortress Australia" policy. Recent announcements declaring
that Australia won't open up until mid-2022 - meaning a two year-plus isolation
- have amplified concerns. Critics argue the extension of closed borders will
cause long-lasting damage to the economy, young people and separated families.
It also tarnishes Australia's character as open and free, they say. Calls for a
clear plan to pull Australia back into the world are growing, as the country
wrestles with an uncomfortable tension - balancing the safety of closed borders
against what is lost by living in isolation. "A Fortress Australia with
the drawbridge pulled up indefinitely is not where we want to be," says
former Race Discrimination Commissioner Dr Tim Soutphommasane. "Australia
is at its best when it's open and confident - not fearful and insular."
Locking the gate In March
2020, the government closed the borders. It barred most foreigners from
entering the country and put caps on total arrivals to combat Covid. Mandatory
14-day quarantine and snap lockdowns have also been used to control the virus
spread. The measures are extreme, and among the strictest in the world.
But they've worked. Australia regularly sees months without a single case
in the community, and it has recorded fewer than 1,000 deaths in the pandemic.
Given that, the strict border controls have proven tremendously popular.
Public polls regularly report 75-80% approval ratings for keeping the door
shut. Even higher numbers - around 90% - approve overall of the
government's pandemic handling, and trust in government has increased in
contrast to views of voters in some Covid-ravaged nations.
Languishing behind But the
government now also faces mounting pressure over how it plans to handle the
next phase of the pandemic. Prime Minister Scott Morrison - who faces an
election next year - has announced Australia won't re-open borders until
mid-2022. The exact timing and just how that will happen are unclear. But
the budget announcement was a shock extension to previous forecasts of an
opening-up to occur slowly at the end of this year. The main reason for
the delay is vaccination. Australia's immunisation programme has been
beset with delays, and lags well behind other developed nations such as the UK
and US.
What's gone wrong with
Australia's vaccine rollout? Critics say complacency over the low virus
circulation delayed its kick-off. And now rising hesitancy - fuelled at least
in part by Australia's isolation - has also slowed the vaccine rollout. Facing
those failures, the government fell back on the border ban as a resort, critics
say. That's dealing a heavy blow to sectors like tourism and higher
education. Australia's strong migration programme - relied on to address skills
shortages and population growth - has also been cut almost completely. Ernst
and Young, an accounting firm, estimates that Australia's economy is losing
A$7.6bn (£4.18; $5.9bn) a month from the closed borders. So a group of
experts from the University of Sydney have called for an exit plan to be put in
place. People need to know their options and prepare for the future, they say.
Their "roadmap to re-opening" focuses on prioritising
vaccination, expanding quarantine and starting trials to bring in people for
affected industries. They point to successful examples like the New
Zealand travel bubble, and the Australian Open tennis tournament. "The
price of staying closed indefinitely is simply too great," they wrote in a
recent report. "This is the case when measured in hard dollar
terms, but also when measured against less tangible factors such as fuelling a
negative and inwards-focused national psyche that threatens our global
standing, as well as national unity and cohesion."
'Us and them' mentality Others
have also voiced their concerns over how an extended retreat from the world
could damage Australia's character. When Australia was parochial it had
a White Australia policy (1900s-1970s), which restricted immigration from
non-European nations. Multiculturalism has replaced that policy in recent
decades, but the ideal is still fragile, experts warn. Dr Liz Allen, a
demographer at the Australian National University, contends that Covid has
already made the nation more "protectionist and insular". Government
policies have created an "us and them" division, she argues. The
hostile treatment of migrants is a clear example, she says. Australia's
conservative government of eight years has never advocated for immigration -
the coalition won the 2019 election pledging to "slash" the migrant
intake. At the start of the pandemic, Mr Morrison told the nation's two
million migrants on temporary visas to "go home". Those visa
holders - often doing the low-paid, essential jobs of cleaning and food
delivery - were also ineligible for the government's pandemic welfare support,
leaving many facing destitution. The border ban has also sown community
division, seen in its most extreme form last month when Australia took the
world-first step of threatening jail for citizens who returned home from
Covid-ravaged India. The Indian-Australian community expressed outrage they
were being treated like second-class citizens.
Multicultural roots The
issue of stranded Australians reflects Australia's character as an intensely
multicultural nation. Nearly 30% of the population were born overseas,
and another quarter have a parent who was. As a nation of migrants, so many
Australians have deep personal ties to other parts of the world. Prior
to Covid, about one million Australians were estimated to be living and working
overseas. A section of the population - often highly educated and skilled - was
also very mobile. But the closed-border policy doesn't appear to
recognise these global connections or the disproportionate impact on first and
second-generation Australians, critics say. In addition, the borders
created a narrative where blame for a virus outbreak was often laid at the feet
of returning individuals. "We turned on ourselves, on our own
people," says Dr Allen. Political leaders described the virus as
"imported" by returning travellers, rather than escaping through
failures in the hotel quarantine system. Such rhetoric egged on social media
commentary blaming incoming Australians.
Just happy to be safe But while there's division aimed at Australians outside the country, within the borders people feel comfortable with their lot. First and foremost, people say they feel relieved and grateful to be shielded from the virus. "There's a lot of sympathy and real feeling for people caught up outside, and for the people who can't go to weddings and funerals overseas," says Melissa Monteiro, head of a migrant resource community centre in western Sydney. "But you know, everyone ends with 'that's just how it is'. People are firstly, just grateful to be in this country and to be safe." Race relations researcher Andrew Markus, an emeritus professor at the University of Monash, says most Australians also don't view the closed borders as a cultural isolation, or a "shutting yourself off from the world". Instead it's just seen as a necessary short-term health measure - an attitude adopted across the political and cultural spectrum, he says. He notes too that polling throughout the pandemic showed Australians' support for multiculturalism and globalisation remained strong - about 80% approval - despite concerns about social cohesion and a rise in hate crimes against Asian-Australians. Dr Allen says that the strong support for the government's Covid fight is understandable - particularly when it has worked. But she also says that the Australian public has been presented with no other options. The prolonged border closure and city lockdowns on single infections have all been largely uncontested policies. She says it's time now for Australia to move past such policies which she feels are rooted in fear. The country continues to face calls to bring back its own citizens. "I don't think it's bad that people are afraid of Covid - we should be afraid. But we require leadership going forwards that doesn't leave people behind." Our goal is to create a safe and engaging place for users to connect over interests and passions. In order to improve our community experience, we are temporarily suspending article commenting.
^ Australia has turned from an
open Democracy to a closed, self-isolated place that doesn’t even allow many of
its own citizens back into the country. You get the true sense of a person or a
country when they have to deal with an emergency and what Australia is
currently doing is a dark-stain on its history. This article says that
Australia only isolated itself from the outside world, but the reality is that
the different Australian States and Territories also isolated themselves from
each other. Now Australia lags behind the rest of the Western, Industrialized
World in getting and giving the Covid Vaccine to its citizens. I also have
never heard of a Democratic country restricting its own citizens from entering their
own country before (have quarantines upon arrival is one thing and completely
refusing their entry is another.) If Australia wants to save its sink from a
Democracy to a Dictatorship as well as its tarnished Covid Downfall it needs to
open up (especially to its own citizens. ^
https://www.yahoo.com/news/fortress-australia-why-calls-open-161617353.html
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.