Month: December 2025

  • L4R Newsletter June 2025 – Labor for Refugees NSW/ACT

    Next L4R meeting in June

    Please attend our meeting to discuss where to now, after Labor’s win in the recent election.  Labor can no longer hide behind the fear that it will be wedged by the Coalition if it dares to implement its own refugee policies, adopted at the ALP National Conference in 2023. 

    Issues that deal with refugees, must no longer be treated as the ‘elephant in the room’, just because refugees did not feature as a priority in the election campaign.

    The Minutes of our previous meeting dated 28 May follow MinutesNSW-ACT28May25

    Ride for Education – update in the lead up to Refugee Week
    The Cisarua Learning Centre in Indonesia is fundraising for the Centre and for women in Afghanistan with Muzafar Ali and his team’s marathon bike ride.

    The epic journey continues.  They are currently heading down to Moruya for a screening of The Staging Post.Yesterday (Tuesday), they had a beautiful event in Canberra and a hugely significant visit to the Embassy of Afghanistan.The Embassy, as seen by the mulit-coloured flag, still represents the Republic of Afghanistan and not the Taliban Regime.

    Muzafar spoke strongly for women’s education and freedom which is restricted by the Taliban.

    There are plenty more events in Canberra and the south.  They hope you can make it out to see them at one of their events in Victoria & South Australia.
     

    Members of the team participating in this ride, are overwhelmed by the love and encouragement they have received and have asked you to consider joining the WhatsApp Group or Instagram to follow them. There’s been dancing, films, feasts, friends and plenty of riding!
     

    NOW IS THE TIME TO MAKE A DONATION.  DONATIONS ARE TAX DEDUCTIBLE. HELP POWER THEM THROUGH TO ADELAIDE — SUPPORT THE RIDE HERE

    Basic route information follows https://rideforeducation.com/route 

    High Court challenge launched for man facing deportation to Nauru

    Everybody deserves to live with dignity and fairness, regardless of visa status.But refugees and migrants are being singled out for harsher treatment by Australia’s cruel migration laws. The Human Rights Law Centre (HRLC) has filed proceedings in the High Court on behalf of one man. Please read the following article published by the HRLC.https://www.hrlc.org.au/updates/deportation-challenge/  2 April 2025

    Skills recognition of Refugees

     An Australian Institute of Family Studies report tracking the long-term employment of refugees showed that almost half of all those previously working as managers and professionals are, 10 years later, still not working in those kinds of jobs in Australia. The study surveyed about 2,400 humanitarian migrants over a decade. The report recommended more coordinated recognition of skills and qualifications gained overseas, as well as inclusive recruitment practices and language support.

    The persistent employment struggles of refugees’ (audio), SBS 11 June 2025Almost half of refugees suffering from ‘occupational downgrade’ 10 years after settling  ABC News 11 June 2025You may recall that Labor for Refugees ran a campaign last year re this issue and wrote to Federal and State Ministers about the urgent need to fast track skilled refugees.  The motion we asked our members to take to their branches to support, was circulated including the background information.   

    The link to the motion follows

    L4RNSW-ACTSkillsRecognitionRefugeesOct 24

    It’s not too late to endorse this motion at your next branch meeting.  It can then be submitted to the next NSW ALP Conference as an agenda item.  Also to the next ACT Conference.

    Hopefully, this report may ignite some interest from our politicians, and prompt them to address this issue which would benefit these refugees/migrants as well as our wider community.

    Nizza SianoSecretary L4R NSW

    email: 

     contact@labor4refugees.com 

  • L4R Newsletter October 2024 – Labor for Refugees NSW/ACT

    Next L4R Meeting
    Our October meeting takes place next Wednesday 23 October commencing at 6.30pm.

    We held a successful and most informative meeting last month with our guest speaker Muzafar Ali, who is the Co-CEO of the Learning Centre in Indonesia, addressing our meeting. 

    Muzafar reported in detail about the dire situation for refugees who are stuck in Indonesia – some for more that 12 years and some so desperate that they have suicided.  The situation has been made worse due to the fact that this year, the Australian Government stopped funding the UNHCR so these refugees are struggling even more, to survive financially. 

    We came up with a number of strategies to try and encourage the Australian Government to meet it’s ALP Platform obligations to find a pathway to assist these refugees to come to Australia.  Supporting those who have skills and have received training in Indonesia, is one way of doing this by matching them with employers in Australia who are desperate for skilled workers.  For more details of what we discussed, please read our October minutes (using the link above).

    Motion for skills recognition of refugees!!  

    We recently called for support for the following motion, which asks the government to remove barriers, by using a new fast-track system of skills recognition for refugees.  The motion was supported by a number of branches.  That’s great news.  However, let’s try to increase that number by having more branches endorse it at their October//November meetings.This campaign was initiated after a refugee advocacy group in far North Queensland approached Labor for Refugees, asking for our support.  The group volunteers its services by sponsoring refugees but had regularly come up against a wall of government bureaucracy/delays when wanting to provide work for these refugees by utilising the skills of these refugees – skills that are much needed in our community.We need to make it easier for refugees living in our community, to contribute to the workforce as well as providing them with a much needed source of income.Once again, I urge you to take the following motion to your branch meeting and ask members to support it.

    “Labor for Refugees NSW-ACT calls on the federal government to respond promptly and positively to the Billion Dollar Benefit campaign and to ensure that the government’s response includes a fast track program of skills recognition of displaced people in our community, so that they can qualify quickly to take on valuable work roles in our economy, and contribute to their own settlement and to Australian society.  L4R urges the government to ensure that this program –

          1.  includes within it, free, intense and supportive TESOL (Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages) and
    on-going support to match displaced people’s skills; 

           2.  includes, as part of the program, early contact with relevant professional and trade bodies to ensure they understand and are supportive of the fast track professional skills program, and early connections between participants and potential employers, and relevant professional and trade bodies.” BACKGROUND TO MOTION  L4RSkillsRecognitionBackgroundPaper8Oct24Further action:L4R will urge the government to extend and expand the TBB (Talent Beyond Boundaries) Skilled Refugee Labour Agreement Pilot program so that it can become one of the reliable permanent settlement pathways for refugees in Indonesia.Motion to be sent to: 

    Minister for Home Affairs and Minister for Immigration and Multicultural Affairs Tony Burke 

    Tony.Burke.MP@aph.gov.au
    Minister for Employment and Workplace Relations of Australia Murray Watt 
    senator.watt@aph.gov.au
    Your FEC.

    People with Disability in Immigration Detention


    We proposed dealing with a motion a few months ago, details of which were sent to members in our September newsletter.  Our L4R member who wanted to move it at our meeting was unable to do so but will be attending our meeting next week.  If this motion is supported at our meeting, we will ask you to take it to your branch meeting and urge members to endorse it.
     

    The motion with a detailed background follows RefugeesWithDisabilityMotionSep24


    Good news for the Asylum Seekers Centre and for refugees!!

    The Asylum Seekers Centre received a major funding boost from the NSW Government which was announced last Friday. Labor for Refugees NSW/ACT has always been a strong supporter of the Asylum Seekers Centre and from time to time, donated funds to the Centre as well as inviting its CEO Frances Rush to be a guest speaker at some of our events.The Centre will be able to expand primary care clinics and meet the increasingly complex health needs of some of Sydney’s most vulnerable residents, thanks to a grant of more than $1 million.Minister for Health Ryan Park announced funding of $1.07 million over three years for the Centre, which will help employ more clinical staff to manage the growing number of chronic illnesses such as diabetes and cardiovascular disease in the asylum seeker community.The funding will also help the Centre address the increasing need and cost of medicine for members of the community without access to the Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme (PBS).The Asylum Seekers Centre is a not-for-profit organisation that was established in 1993 and offers practical and personal support to people seeking asylum. The Centre also provides primary healthcare services for people seeking asylum with limited Medicare eligibility through a specialist nurse-led health service with volunteer GPs and other specialists.

    The Centre’s health service runs four GP clinics per week and has seen an 81 per cent increase in visits since June 2022. The complexity of visits has increased due to growing mental health presentations, an ageing population, and increased demand for pharmaceuticals, compounded by rising costs.

    L4R is currently in negotiations with Frances Rush to be our keynote speaker at our Fringe Event, planned for our meeting date in November.  All the Fringe Events were cancelled at the July NSW Labor Conference.  We were promised that they would be rescheduled and they will now take the form of Zoom meetings.  NSW Labor will be promoting them once we confirm the details.

    Watch this space!!!

    Pride in Protest Campaign

    Please see the letter below regarding an Indonesian transgender woman who has been detailed in Villawood. Pride in Protest is starting a campaign and seeks endorsement for the letter below. We were also asked to sign a petition.  We agreed to promote the campaign and sign the petition.

    Dear Minister for Immigration, Minister for Home Affairs, Minister for Health and Assistant Minister for Health.

    On your watch, as a direct result of racist profiling, the Federal Government has violated the human rights of Asian migrant women, resulting in transgender women being held in immigration detention, with their health needs being denied and at risk of transphobic violence. After losing work for an Australian company because of transphobic discrimination, an Indonesian transgender woman was profiled at the border, detained and continues to suffer mental, physical and sexual human rights abuses in detention.We are calling on the Federal Government to act now to restore dignity and safety to the transgender women in immigration detention, and ensure nobody else is put through the harm that too many others have been put through:1. End profiling and turning back of Asian women at the border.2. Dignity and safety for transgender people in immigration detention. Implement best standard health care protocols for trans people in detention, training for staff, fair access to hormones and other essential medical care, independent and transparent complaints process, and introduce routine external audits of detention conditions.3. End mandatory detention of people awaiting immigration decisions and outcomes.LGBTQIA+ and all asylum seekers should be supported to be housed in the community while awaiting immigration andvisa decisions. Close the detention centres, end offshore detention, and assess individuals from their location in thecommunity.

    4. No deportations to danger. End the practice of deporting people seeking asylum.

    Please consider taking this motion to your branch meeting and asking members to support it.

    I hope we will see you at our meeting next week.

    Nizza SianoSecretary L4R NSW

    email: 

     contact@labor4refugees.com