Thousands of Australians tried to show support. Not a single letter was received.
In May last year, Melbourne barrister Julian Burnside organised a campaign for letters of goodwill and support to be sent to immigration detainees in Nauru.
The purpose of the letters was to remind asylum seekers in detention that they were not alone, and that not every Australian is hostile towards refugees. Each letter contained a self-addressed stamped envelope, giving the detainees the option to reply to the sender if they wished.
Mamamia got behind the campaign, encouraging our readers to participate in the excellent cause.
But according to The Guardian, today brings the awful news that of the thousands of letters sent, not a single one reached its intended recipient.
And that news is simply devastating.
Burnside became aware only weeks after the letters had been sent that no replies were being received from Nauru. When he attempted to follow up with then Department of Immigration and Border Protection’s lead service delivery officer at the Nauru offshore processing centre, Nikki Keirven, he was assured that the letters were ‘arriving and being distributed to transferees.”
Asylum seekers are offering to donate their organs to Australians, for a truly tragic reason.
Yet, when replies still failed to come – unusual, given that past asylum seekers had always responded eagerly to messages of support – Burnside continued to press for information.