Yassmin Abdel-Maggied Targets Australia Again On Asylum Seeker Issue

Yassmin Abdel-Maggied Targets Australia Again On Asylum Seeker Issue

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Yassmin Abdel-Maggied Targets Australia Again On Asylum Seeker Issue
Activist Yassmin Abdel-Magied has labelled Australia as a country founded by invasion, theft of land and genocide in a rant in support of the Manus Island asylum seekers.
The 26-year-old former ABC presenter, launched the tirade on Twitter against those in power, saying that the treatment of the people on Manus Island was deeply ‘un-Australian.’
Her response comes just days after news broke that 600 detainees had locked themselves inside the ‘regional processing centre’ without food or water as the government decided to ‘discontinue critical services’ on October 31, the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees said.

Pictures claiming to show men digging a makeshift well in the dirt in hopes of finding water have been shared alongside the news, with Abdel-Magied saying the government was ‘acting cruelly, unfairly, uncourageously and without integrity.’
‘Lest we forget Manus, I suggested, over six months ago. The backlash was said to be because I was unAustralian, disrespecting our history, & sullying the memory of the diggers and the ANZACS,’ she wrote online.

This isn’t what they fought for, I was told. How dare you disrespect the Aussie spirit.’
Abdel-Magied was making reference to her Anzac Day tweet earlier this year which read: ‘Lest we forget (Manus, Nauru, Syria, Palestine).’
She copped considerable public backlash for the comment, which was later deleted, and was criticised by Peter Dutton and Tony Abbott.

Tell me. How is what we are doing on Manus Island to other human beings respecting the Australian Spirit? How is what we are doing to people,’ she continued.
She continued by calling out the Australian government for ‘standing behind a policy that is implemented in the most inhumane way.’
‘We CANNOT in good conscious say that we are living up to these ‘Australian values.
Manus Island refugees fear for lives ahead of centre closure