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9 - Conclusion

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  19 May 2017

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Summary

… in 25 march 2013 i left from indonesia

by ilegal boat and i have been in torture five days

in the oceon between kindari sulewesi

and to darwin, then australian navy caught us and servived us,

at the moment iam … still in camp

i hope that next month to come to Sydney.

(message forwarded by Ali through Facebook, 16 April 2013)

STUCK AGAIN

On a balmy autumn afternoon in 2014 in a not so cosy suburb in Western Sydney I am about to meet Ali, whose story this book begins with, again. A few weeks earlier, I received notice that he had finally been released from immigration detention in Darwin. Despite a number of failed attempts earlier on and “many litres of swallowed salt water”, as Ali put it, he had kept trying to reach Australia by boat. In April 2013, just a few months before the Australian government sealed its borders to maritime arrivals, Ali had eventually made it. The decision to risk his life, once again, on a tiny boat to cross the sea was anything but an easy one. Ali had spent years waiting for his proper resettlement as a recognized refugee. At times, when waiting became unbearable and he was about to lose hope, he had even contemplated returning voluntarily to Somalia, but the UNHCR would not approve this plan, leaving him stuck in Indonesia.

Having faced death once before on a sinking boat near Sumba, Ali was fully aware of the risks involved. When the prices charged by people smugglers dropped in early 2013 because of the very high demand for their services and a sort of “end-of-season sale”, Ali wanted to try his luck once more. He called a number of friends in Europe to lend him money and managed to scrape together AU$2,000. Just after he had paid the money collector, he got notice from the United States Embassy that he was invited for an interview to determine whether or not he could be resettled in the United States. Ali was torn: should he opt to continue the proper process, knowing that in the preceding four years only one Somali person had been approved for resettlement by any destination country?

Type
Chapter
Information
Troubled Transit
Asylum Seekers Stuck in Indonesia
, pp. 237 - 244
Publisher: ISEAS–Yusof Ishak Institute
Print publication year: 2015

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