DEAR
MR ABBOTT|
LET ME TELL YOU ABOUT HUMANITY
WRITING | RACHEL BLACKBURN
On Tuesday evening, October 27, 2015, Tony Abbott (the 28th Prime Minister of Australia) delivered a speech in London, choosing to take this opportunity to discuss the LARGEST refugee crisis since World War II. Don’t get too excited- he didn’t use the spotlight in the way you may have hoped.
At present, there are 60 million people displaced- that means, there are 60 million people who have fled their homes, their cities, their schools, their jobs, their friends, their families- their LIFE. 60 million people. Can you envision that for a moment? I have spent the last nine days of my #tendaystotellme campaign writing about the atrocities that are occurring in nine countries around the world: Democratic Republic of Congo; Uganda; Malawi; India; Bangladesh; Syria; Rwanda; Central African Republic; Afghanistan. While not all people within these countries are fleeing or seeking refuge, they are living through hardship and are dealing with issues that require our attention. I have reached day 10 of the campaign, one I had intended to be discussing a country- though, I have instead, chosen to write an open letter to Mr Abbott- to talk to him about humanity.
Dear Mr Abbott,
My name is Rachel Blackburn, I’m 26, a similar age to your daughters, in fact I taught at the school they attended. I’m from Sydney’s Northern Beaches- just like you. And I grew up in your electorate, Warringah. We are both Alumni of Sydney University. My Grandfather is a journalist, like you once were. But our similarities end there. I have chosen to spend the 10th and last day of my #tendaystotellme campaign to write an open letter to you. I hope it gets to you- as it seems you need me to #TELLYOUABOUTHUMANITY
Mr Abbott, you are undoubtedly a man of great influence and it saddens me, with your ability to spread a message, you have chosen to spread the message of fear and panic. Isn’t it ironic, that as you delivered a speech about the worlds most vulnerable- you stood behind a podium, at a banquet in London to an audience of Tory ministers and Conservative Party members- in your black and white tux. Now, don’t get me wrong, I love a black and white Tux, but Mr Abbott, I fear you are so far removed from the term humanity, you may not know what is actually at stake here? Our humanity- the humanity of the world, is at stake here.
Mr Abbott, I know you understand the power of media and their ability to lift words and contextualise them in a way favourable to the story. While I was not a guest in the audience and I did not hear the tone of your voice, or the posture you held- I have read the transcript of your speech and whether you feel elements were taken out of ‘context’ or not- those words are in black and white and it has reached the masses. You mentioned the Syrian conflict, stating over a million have died and seven million are displaced- though you neglected to make a single statement about the devastation currently being felt by the 60 million displaced persons around the world. Given, you may have been time poor, however, prioritizing fear over possibility, I believe, is an error in judgment. In the past five years, at least 15 conflicts have erupted or reignited: eight in Africa (Côte d'Ivoire, Central African Republic, Libya, Mali, northeastern Nigeria, Democratic Republic of Congo, South Sudan and this year in Burundi); three in the Middle East (Syria, Iraq, and Yemen); one in Europe (Ukraine) and three in Asia (Kyrgyzstan, and in several areas of Myanmar and Pakistan). You did outline the crimes against humanity occurring in Syria, though you did not take the opportunity to state that serious human rights abuses have been reported in five countries around the world: Syria, Iraq, Afghanistan, Somalia and Eritrea, all but Eritrea including violence due to armed conflict. At the last count, UNHCR reported that these abuses had driven almost 25 million people from their homes, including almost 12 million Syrians, 4.2 million Iraqis, 3.6 million Afghans, 2.2 million Somalis, and almost half a million Eritreans. 25 million is Australia’s entire population- displaced.
Mr Abbott, wars cost human lives. You have spoken about monetary costs and logistics. But the cost here is life. You have said, “It will require some force; it will require massive logistics and expense; it will gnaw at our consciences - yet it is the only way to prevent a tide of humanity surging through Europe and quite possibly changing it forever." A tide of humanity it certainly is, but why do you suggest we expend resources on stopping them? Why are we not expending resources on helping them? You’ve said they have “no legal right to come here” but many may argue WE had “no legal right” to go there and bomb their schools, their homes, their cities and to leave them open and vulnerable to inside attacks that are now shattering their existence. I am not naïve- I understand these problems are complex and vast to say the least and I don’t know what the solution is- but I do know it’s not turning away millions of humans to die.
Mr Abbott, there is a stark difference between a refugee and an ‘economic immigrant’. I agree, they both exist, but the danger of using those terms interchangeably is detrimental to humanity. People are entitled to protection under international law if they fear a real risk of persecution or other serious harm in their home country. The argument often arises "let's help our own first”. I agree, there are many Australians in need, but refugees are fleeing war torn countries- they are fleeing, in so many instances, death. I think that's where people get confused. It's not that they're "poor" or "don't have jobs" it's that they're being slaughtered, raped and forced from their homes and cities- desperately seeking refuge. You have said, “All countries that say ‘anyone who gets here can stay here’ are now in peril- there are tens-perhaps hundreds- of millions of people, living in poverty and danger, who might readily seek to enter a Western country if the opportunity is there”. Mr Abbott, what message are you sending our children? In the position you are in, in the opportunity you’ve been given, why is instilling fear your choice? How can you assert “no country can open its boarders without fundamentally weakening itself”? Mr Abbott, it is as young as Kindergarten that we are taught the value of helping. The value of reaching out and stopping when someone is in need. Of giving- not taking. Of helping them- not stopping them. Yet, as the public figure you are, you make such damaging statements such as these? To insinuate that by helping, we are in some way risking our own way of life?
Mr Abbott, where has your self-entitlement come from? When did being an Australian or part of the Western world lead us to believe we are in some way more entitled to freedom? More entitled to life? More entitled to oxygen? I am an Australian because I was born here- by chance- not by right. You are an Australian because you immigrated here- from opportunity- not by right. You have free will, because you are Australian- by chance- not by choice. You have freedom of speech, clean drinking water, shelter, protection, opportunity for employment, your family is safe and your daughters are educated- by chance of birthplace- not by choice. How can you deny life to so many? Their fate is no fault of their own- their life, their turmoil- is by chance- not by choice.
Mr Abbott, have you seen the images surfacing from Syria, Somalia, Iraq? Do you see the people, who board the boats, holding their children, unsure of whether they will live or die? Have you seen the malnutrition suffered by over 25 million children? Have you seen the image of the young Syrian boy who flies a kite made from a box? Have you seen the video of the young girl begging for someone “to understand us”? Because Mr Abbott, I feel you have not. You state “it is our moral obligation to receive people fleeing for their lives- it is not to provide permanent residence to anyone who would rather live in a prosperous Western country than their own”. Yesterday I played cricket in North Sydney with an eight-year-old. Isn’t it bizarre to know that there are children who have never done this? There are children who have never known anything other than conflict? This is not about a prosperous life, this is about the opportunity to have a life. The opportunity to play cricket. To play outdoors without being shot. Mr Abbott- people are fleeing for their lives- to save their children- their wives and husbands- they are running to a place they have never even seen- surely, you cannot believe this is about “a more prosperous life”- you MUST understand this is life or death. Privilege is invisible to those who have it and when you state “The only way to stop people trying to gain entry is to firmly and unambiguously to deny it- out of the moral duty to protect one’s own people”, I believe you cannot see your own privilege. This is their fight for humanity but they cannot win this alone.
Mr Abbott, what happens in Australia when you know a crime is happening or about to happen, yet you do nothing? You are charged as an accessory. How is this global crisis any different? We know what is happening, we know of the atrocities that are occurring each and every single minute. People are fighting, dying and starving- yet you expect us to do nothing? In fact- no, you expect us to do more than nothing, which is to turn them away to die. Is that not being an accessory to murder?
When did the value of a human life become dependent on place of birth? When did the value of human breath, become dependent on citizenship? Mr Abbott, I urge you to see our fast changing world for what it is. We are humanity. This global village we live in, is humanity. It is people, with the aid of policies that will change the world. We must fight for humanity. Because this will be the single biggest devastation on the hands of humanity if we allow millions of people to die on our doorsteps.
“It is sickening to see thousands of refugees drowning on the doorstep of the world's wealthiest continent. No one risks the lives of their children in this way except out of utter desperation”. - Angelina Jolie, UNHCR Goodwill Ambassador on the recent drowning’s of the migrants fleeing to Europe
#DEARMRABBOTT
#TENDAYSTOTELLME
#LETMETELLYOUABOUTHUMANITY






