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7 votes
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Refugee suicide attempts up on Manus after Australia election
6 votes -
Chinese surveillance near Papua New Guinea expanding as Australia and US begin Manus Island naval upgrades
6 votes -
Australian government prepares to remove 300 refugees from Manus Island and Nauru in first wave of transfers
4 votes -
Behrouz Boochani: Detained asylum seeker wins Australia's richest literary prize
4 votes -
US to partner with Australia, Papua New Guinea on Manus Island naval base
4 votes -
Australia's barbaric policy confronted by Boochani's prison memoir
Summary The article is an interview with Behrouz Boochani, a Kurdish refugee who has been detained by the Australian government on Manus Island since 2015. Boochani discusses his experiences of...
Summary
The article is an interview with Behrouz Boochani, a Kurdish refugee who has been detained by the Australian government on Manus Island since 2015. Boochani discusses his experiences of detention and the book he has written about those experiences.
Extract
I don't remember exactly when I started to write the first words but I remember that I thought my writing of this time was like a mission and duty ... to make readers aware of this prison camp. I imagined there would be unknown readers from around the world ... That's why I wrote it in a literary language. Not only for this historical period or those people who are involved in this plight ... I wrote this book so that it extends beyond geographical bounds and generational imaginaries.
This chapter about the way they exiled us to Manus was one of the hardest parts to write … If you remember, years ago, I wrote a letter to you and complained that I was scared of writing, that I hate writing. You answered me, saying: ‘Behrouz I wrote about my relatives who were killed.’ Your grandparents, aunties, uncles, cousins … I knew that I had to do it to survive. I knew that I could expose this system through these words … I could get back my identity through writing this book and not allowing this system to reduce me to a number.
Link
4 votes -
Writing from Manus prison: a scathing critique of domination and oppression. Behrouz Boochani spent almost five years typing passages of his book into a mobile phone. The result resists classification
9 votes