Siege single work   prose  
Note: Curated by Janet Galbraith and Mohamed Adam, Dja Dja Wurrung Country–Castlemaine and Manus Island, 2018
Issue Details: First known date: 2021... 2021 Siege
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AbstractHistoryArchive Description

'On 31 October 2017, the Australian Government announced that they were going to relocate more than 600 refugees from Manus prison camp in Lombrum to three new camps in another part of Manus Island. The refugees refused to leave the prison camp because they said we will not allow them to relocate us to new prison camps after four and half years of imprisonment. We demand freedom. Staff from the private companies paid by Australia to run the prison at that time, Wilson Security, IHMS (International Health Medical Services) and Broadspectrum, left the camp and the refugees were left without food, water, power or medical facilities for 23 days.' (Introduction)

Notes

  • Manus Island, 2017

Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of

  • Appears in:
    y separately published work icon Southerly Writing Through Fences – Archipelago of Letters vol. 79 no. 2 2021 23374465 2021 periodical issue

    'The island continent has created an archipelago of incarceration spanning from South East Asia, Micronesia and Melanesia in the Pacific, the Indian Ocean and across mainland Australia. This issue of Southerly, titled Writing Through Fences, is devoted entirely to the work of past and present refugees in these detention centres.

    'The records of their experiences are devastating; their creative responses, across genres and media, are astounding. The issue also includes responses from Australian writers, activists, essayists and students, who engage with refugee writing as well as the practices and consequences of refugee incarceration.

    'Writing Through Fences is guest edited by the writer-activists Hani Abdile, Behrouz Boochani, Janet Galbraith and Omid Tofighian. Two of these editors have direct experience of Australian refugee detention. Three have been displaced and exiled. All four have worked for years with refugees as translators, enablers and publishers to bring the creative voices of refugees into public view and circulation. This issue presents the greatest range of new refugee writing assembled to date in Australia.' (Publication summary)

    2021
    pg. 267-290
Last amended 6 Dec 2021 13:19:21
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