n ik on Thu, 4 Apr 2002 05:42:01 +0200 (CEST)
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[Nettime-bold] personal account from the Woomera 2002 protests in Australia
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Title: personal account from the Woomera 2002 protests in
Aus
[for more details of
the actions, photos, audio reports and interviews with escaped
detainees, see http://melbourne.indymedia.org. Also check out the
protest website, http://www.womera2002.com]
I'm not sure where
to start - if this had just been a matter of filing reports each
night, it might have been easier. But for some reason my box was
inaccessible from Woomera (amongst other things I was part of the
desert.indymedia crew), and so I'm writing this two days after the
end of a protest that will mark Australia for a long time to come.
I'll compile some of the best indymedia story links to send out, and
write up something on desert.indymedia later. For now I just
want to tell the story of the first two days of the
protest.
Well before we set up the blockade of the Asia-pacific meeting
of the World Economic Forum (see http://www.s11.org) back in 2000,
there had been talk of doing a massive protest action at the Woomera
Detention Centre in 2002 (the detention centre is a centre for holding
people who are waiting for determination on their refugee status, or
are deemed 'illegal immigrants'. Its also in the middle of a
desert 8 hours drive from the closest city). In march last year we
began to organise for the protestsŠ.we didn't really know what to
expect. I thought that there would be perhaps 300 people who would
make the journey out to Woomera - in the end it was more like 1500
people who travel from all around Australia to make the
connectionsŠ
I'm not sure how much people know of what has happened - I got email
from a friend in Germany who had been watching it on CNN, and saw us
help some 50 detainees break-out of the detention centreŠ.but I will
try to recount the Thursday and Friday of the protest (it went from
Thursday till Monday afternoon).
About 30 of us met
up at 9am on Thursday 28 March at the Pimba roadhouse, about 6km down
the road from Woomera. We were going to go and set up the basics of
the camp for everyone else, many of whom where due to arrive on
Friday. We had been negotiating with the Woomera Area Manager for a
day or twoŠWoomera is in a 'prohibited area' - you used to have
to have a permit to go there, and it is in the area of Australia's
atomic testing grounds, uranium mines, rocket ranges, etcŠand the
area manager had a proposal for us. He wanted us to camp in a disused
(and decrepit) old sports ground , about 2km from where we wanted to
camp.
We decided to play
for time, because there were so few of us. We were determined to camp
where we had decided too though. By lunch time, we had started to set
up the camp site just across the road from the new fence that
surrounded the detention centre (about 1-1.5km from the centre
itself). We had also had two meetings with the area manager by now,
and had managed to negotiate some portable toilets out of him for our
site (under the pretense that it would be nothing more than facilities
for protests during the day ;-) ). We heard
from the APS at 2pm though, who had been staying out of our way all
morning. The APS are the Australian Protective Services - the federal
police who have jurisdiction in that area. The APS told us that we had
to move the camp, and the deadline was 2pm. We told them that we had a
meeting with the area manager at 2.30, and that they would have to
wait until this had happenedŠand they agreed. The meeting didn't
amount to much more than him saying that we had to move, and us saying
no, but it did buy us another hour.
At about 3.30pm, 15 APS officers came into the camp and told us that
we had to leave, as we were breaking the law and camping illegally. We
lined up in front of our (meager) campsite, waiting to see what would
happen. In the end it was completely farcical - they moved in and
pulled down several tents. They even stacked them neatly for us. Then
they went back to the centre. Oh yeh, a real display of powerŠ
We had been expecting at the very least the confiscation of our gear,
and arrest at the worst. We had been making plans for resisting
pre-emptive arrests and massive disruption, but we didn't plan on
the incompetence of the APS and the division between the APS and State
police - two things that would help determine the course of the
weekend in no small way.
After the tents had
come down, we quickly meet up and decided that we would stay at the
campsite we had chosen, and if the situation got too bad, move back to
the road house meeting spot and wait for reinforcements. We decided
that if we started to cede to their demands early on in the protest,
it would put us in a weaker position through out the protest. We also
decided that we couldn't make such a huge decision on behalf of
everyone else who hadn't turned up yet.
Nothing more
happened during the day and well into the night. At around 12am, when
most people had gone to bed for the night, people on watch started
yelling that the APS were coming. We all got up quickly and got ready
for the feared attack on the camp (our numbers had grown to about 50
by then). 15 APS officers came into the camp and started moving from
group to group and tent to tent to deliver the 'warning of arrest'
to people before they arrested them. Here our organising structure
helped us - we had no set representatives or leaders, only temporary
ones (like the people we delegated to go and talk to the area
manager). And after a long day trying to find such people, the APS had
realised this. So if they wanted to move us, they would have to warn
each and everyone of us, rather than just a leader of representative.
A crowd quickly gathered around the APS officers, and soon enough they
decided to try and arrest some people. They grabbed some one to
arrest, and people jumped in to free him - the APS were overwhelmed
and the person set freeŠ.this happened two more times, with our
confidence growing each time. The APS officers became scattered
throughout the camp, and started to argue with us. In the end, the APS
retreated to chants of 'you've lost control, you've lost
control'Š
We quickly met up again and decided to stay put - again we decided
that we needed to hold our ground. We drew the cars around in a
'wagon-circle', set up sentries, and settled down for the
night.
Come morning we couldn't believe that we hadn't been raided during
the night. Buses started to arrive at the camp and we all started to
set up the site (again). More and more people arrived during the day,
and by around 5pm our numbers had swelled to around 1000. Most of the
day was spend having meetings and setting upŠone of the only things
I can clearly remember from the day from receiving news of a letter
that had been smuggled out of the centre from 183 of the detainees
saying how much they appreciated the protests, and thanking us. The
only other thing was the cries of 'freedom' that came from the
windows of the bus carrying children from Woomera back to the
centreŠ
We received another message from the detainees early on in the day
asking us to come to the fence surrounding the centre at 6pm to
protest with them - they had already done one action during the day,
waving flags, etc. The word was spread around the camp, and we
marched off into the desert to towards the fenceŠ
There are three fences surrounding the centre - a temporary fence (the
one we camped next too), a cyclone fence 3m high topped with razor
wire, and a fence of steel bars topped with razor wire. We marched
around the first fence, which didn't completely surround the centre,
and into the desert. We then came up to the second fenceŠ
There was no plan to take down the second fence - the idea was to come
to the fence (as close as was possible to the centre) and try to
communicate with the detaineesŠwe climbed on the fence to make
ourselves visible, and so we could seem them. But soon people on the
fence started to shake it, to rock back and forth. Then everyone was
on the fence, trying to bend the bars, to tear it down. It only took a
few minutes, and then it was down. We quickly grabbed sandbags that
were lying around on the other side and threw them on the razor
wireŠand two-thirds of us ran through what must be old basketball
courts to the last fence. There were only about 10 APS guards there in
riot gearŠthe South Australian cops were coming in the distance, but
they weren't many on the ground in front of us. We easily pushed
through to the final fence were we came face to face with those
trapped on the other side of the wire.
(all weekend, the APS and SA police didn't really work together very
well - they don't like each other, and the SA Premier had decided to
us the protest to further political aims, i.e., squeezing more money
out of the Federal government. All this suited us fine..)
We pushed our arms through, they reached back. They cried and called
to us, we cried and called back. I have never seen such desperation or
such pain. I can't imagine what it must be like, to travel so far
across oceans, mountains and deserts just so sanctuary can be snatched
away at the last moment and to find yourself in the middle of a desert
behind fences and razor wire. Later, they told us of the centre guards
putting sleeping pills in their food, and of the threats and beatings
for people who protested. But at the fence, there wasn't much
conversation, just an exchange of grief, anger and love.
Three images from the fence that I will never be able to forget is an
old man cutting his arms on the razor wire trying to reach through the
fence, a child of 6 crying and pointing at a APS officer in riot gear,
and a man writing 'freedom' in his own blood on a security
cameraŠ
We had been there
for 20min's and I had moved back to check out the situation when I
saw a man inside the centre brig out a metal fence post. He jammed it
into the bars of the fence and started to push. Quickly protesters
grabbed hold and started to try to break the cageŠThe first
attempt didn't succeed, but the second did. People started to leap
out of the centre and run for freedom. I saw a mother and her child
running, a man who yelled 'free after 2 years', and an eight year
old boy, all climb through the fence. By this time, about 40-50 South
Australian police officers had gathered to the west of us along the
fence. They marched down to our position and the officer in charge
told us that we had to move out behind the second fence. We packed in
tighter and locked arms, ready to hold them off for as long as we
could so more people could escape. The police came in from one side,
and the APS from the other. We pushed back at them, de-arresting our
friends, making as much room as possible for detainees to make their
escape. The police eventually got between the fence and us, but the
struggle didn't stop. We grabbed some of the detainees the police
had arrested, and continued to push at them. Eventually the police
brought their horses in and galloped them at us in a sweeping motion.
Out in the open there was little we could do to stop the horsesŠwe
didn't come prepared for taking down fences that day, let alone
repel a horse charge.
After we had lost at the fence, we started to run back to camp. As I
left, I turned to look back at the centre. The last thing I saw was
two APS officers in riot gear beating a man down to the ground inside
the centre.
Down the road from the camp, the police had managed to recapture
several detainees and put them inside a police van. People where
trying to get close to them, but the police where holding them
backŠsoon the horses where there too..
I didn't realise this until someone told me back at camp, but people
had been running back with the detainees, swapping clothing with them
on the run, and bringing them back to camp. When I got there, there
was around 40 or so detainees who had not been recaptured yet. The
detainees weren't in one spot - people had hidden them throughout
the camp in their tents and shelters. There was an attempt to hold a
spokes council to figure out our next step, but most of the action was
in smaller networks of affinity groupsŠ
The police set up roadblocks almost immediately. They also set up a
ring of officers and lights around the camp. We were pretty much
surrounded by them. They sent a few initial sweeps through the camp,
but only found one detainee. We stuck to a strategy of keeping calm,
and acting as normal as possible under the circumstances. Quietly we
started to gather supplies, find drivers, and formulate plans for
escape.
Most of the night was spend in some kind of strange waiting room -
waiting for breaks in the police lines, for resources, for plans to
come together. My friends and I did all we could, but we didn't have
cars to use, and so in the end it almost felt like we could do only
small errands - getting money, getting food and clothing, finding
numbers for peopleŠWe heard the next day that detainees inside the
camp had protested all night so the guards couldn't do a head count,
giving the people who had broken out a better chance.
One thing we could do was get their stories out - to help them speak
when the government had taken their voices awayŠthere are many
interviews with escaped detainees out there now, some on film, and
quite a few on Melbourne indymedia.org
Interview one -
http://melbourne.indymedia.org/local/webcast/uploads/metafiles/01-z1ld.mp3
Interview two -
http://melbourne.indymedia.org/local/webcast/uploads/metafiles/02.mp3
Interview three -
http://melbourne.indymedia.org/local/webcast/uploads/metafiles/03.mp3
Interview five -
http://melbourne.indymedia.org/local/webcast/uploads/metafiles/04-fourguys.mp3
A few attempts were made early on in the evening to break the
roadblock - some people tried to drive through, some detainees decided
they would rather take their chances in the desert that go back. Many
weren't successful (16 protesters have been arrested for harboring
detainees and helping them to escape, and 34 detainees were
recaptured), but there are still 8-10 detainees that haven't been
caught yetŠand most of them will not be recaptured I think.
I don't want to say too much more about the escapes during the night
- both because it could endanger people who are still free, and
endanger protesters. I do want to say though that I have never seen
such selfless acts of courage before - the people who tried to break
through the roadblock will have my love and admiration for ever.
The night was difficult - some detainees had expected us to have more
elaborate escape plansŠhow could we tell them that we didn't
expect the fence to come down, let alone for them to escape? The
action was truly spontaneous - one of the most amazing spontaneous
direct actions I have ever seen - but this meant that we were in some
ways unprepared for the result. Most detainees where grateful though,
thanking us for our help, for our resistance. I heard so many stories
of suffering within the camp - of beatings, of being drugged. I heard
people say that they would kill themselves if they had to go back.
Everyone I met from within the centre told me they ha been there for
more than 2 years - 24 months, 26 monthsŠsome said that because the
Australian government had no treaty for deportation (like Iraq) they
were stuck in the camp indefinitely - they couldn't leave, they
couldn't go back. I met a child of eight who had been there for over
2 years with only a guardian - I don't think he knew where his
parents wereŠ
By dawn, most of the detainees had made an attempt to break through
the police lines - some seem to have succeeded, most didn't.
The protests went on for another three days, but I will leave the
stories of those days to indymedia - read the day by day features at
melbourne.indymedia.org for more detailsŠ
I do want to say a few things about the action on Friday
thoughŠ.
I have been asked so many time, and we asked ourselves so many time,
if what we were doing was the right thing, if we had failed the
detainees by not being prepared enough, if the detainees suffering
because of the escapes was our fault.
So often activists from countries like Australia (from the North)
think and act with the assumption that it is only us that can think
and act - that detainees, indigenous peoples, etc, are people we must
help, that we must do something for. Part of the journey out to
Woomera involved losing that assumption. The detainees had initiated
several actions while we were there, and had done many more before. An
they will continue to do so. These are people who had already suffered
incredibly, and yet still managed to cross the world to a country
where they though they would be safe. Of course they will resist their
detention, their isolation, and the beatings and violence of the
guards. And when they can see a chance to end their suffering, they
will take it. The action at during which they escaped was initiated by
them. The bars where first bent by them. The courage to escape was
theirs. But I'm not trying to avoid responsibility here - we made
the journey out there, we brought down the second fence, we held off
the police, and ran roadblocksŠI am not trying to deny what we did -
on the contrary I am incredibly proud of what we have done, and would
do it again. But it is important to remember that we are not the only
people who can resistŠresistance to the camps lives on both sides of
the fence.
Did we fail the detainees? That a hard questionŠwhen I think back, I
don't feel any guilt for what we did. But I do feel guilty for
underestimating both us and them - if I am guilt of anything it is of
not having enough hope. If I had believed that we could have taken
down the fences, I would have been more prepared for it. We all would
have. But under the circumstances, we did all we could, and so I
don't think we failed them. If nothing else, we brought hope to people
where they had none.
I won't be making the mistake of not having enough hope again
though. Nor will anyone else. We can with dignity, joy and hope, and
achieved far more than any of us could have imaginedŠit was the most
militant defense of dignity I have every witnessed. And it won't be
the last. All of us will carry the image of the fence coming down in
our imaginations, and it won't be too long before the fence comes
down againŠ
nik
--
we do not lack communication, on the contrary we have too much of
it. we lack creation. we lack resistance to the present.
--
we do not lack communication, on the contrary we have too much of
it. we lack creation. we lack resistance to the present.