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Sydney Love Makes A Way sit-in prayer vigil at Scott Morrison's office : 無料・フリー素材/写真

Sydney Love Makes A Way sit-in prayer vigil at Scott Morrison's office / lovemakesaway
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Sydney Love Makes A Way sit-in prayer vigil at Scott Morrison's office

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ライセンスクリエイティブ・コモンズ 表示-継承 2.1
説明Christian leaders across Australia are right now holding nationwide sit-ins inside the electoral offices of 7 Government politicians in 6 cities.Today’s peaceful action of more than 50 church-goers is in response to reports that the Government is planning to send 25 babies — who were born on Australia soil to families seeking safety — to the Nauru detention centre. These Christian leaders come from the full breadth of the Australian church (including Pentecostal, Presbyterian, Baptist, Anglican and others).The Christian leaders are committed to remaining in the MPs’ offices until the Government publicly promises that no children will be detained offshore, and that all asylum-seeker children will be released into the Australian community with their families. Sit-ins are occurring in the Sydney office of Immigration Minister Scott Morrison, as well as 6 other Government representatives in Perth, Adelaide, Melbourne, Canberra and Brisbane (details below).“Despite Mr Morrison’s claim that if his amendments to the Migration Act passed Parliament he would release all children from Australian detention centres, his very first act after the Bill was passed was to move 25 precious babies in preparation for sending them to offshore detention in Nauru,” said Love Makes a Way spokesperson Kate Leaney. “This is not only cruel, it is a contradiction of the Immigration Minister’s own words.”“We are here in part to pray and appeal to Mr Morrison that he, as a committed Christian, might have a change of heart and be true to his word. At Christmas, how can we celebrate the birth of Jesus who quickly became a refugee fleeing persecution and not speak out for these 25 babies whose families have also fled persecution?“Today we call on the Government to make a public commitment that no child will be imprisoned offshore. Mr Morrison, these 25 babies born on Australian soil and the 167 children currently in Nauru must be released into the community with their families,” said Ms Leaney.Sister Susan Connelly is currently participating in the sit-in prayer vigil at Scott Morrison’s office, "I'm a Catholic, and a Religious Sister. I am opposed to a national system which treats innocent people as criminals. The way Australia is treating asylum seekers is a slap in the face to human dignity. It is undermining Australia's ethics and integrity."Matt Anslow is also currently participating in the sit-in prayer vigil at Scott Morrison’s office. For Anslow who grew up in Mr. Morrison's electorate of Cook, the issue of how we treat asylum seekers is more personal. "After my grandmother arrived as a pregnant Hungarian refugee she gave birth to my mother on Australian soil. Mum wasn't sent to a detention centre, she was welcomed as an Aussie, so why can't we do the same now?"Preparations to transfer the babies are reportedly underway despite a deal made between Immigration Minister Scott Morrison and Senate crossbenchers that guaranteed children in Australian detention centres would be released. In August, while facing an inquiry into child detention, Mr Morrison said: “Nobody, and especially nobody in this Government, wants to see children in detention if it can be avoided.”Refugee and health experts, including from the UN, Amnesty International and the Australian Medical Association, have roundly condemned Australia’s detention regime. The Australian Churches Refugee Taskforce referred to child detention as “state-sanctioned child abuse”.Australian churches have been united in their opposition to the Government’s asylum-seeker policies, particularly child detention.Today’s sit-ins are part of the ongoing Christian movement called “Love Makes a Way”. Since the first sit-in at Scott Morrison’s office in March this year, more than 100 Christian leaders have been peacefully arrested (and praised for their conduct by magistrates) as part of #LoveMakesAWay actions calling on the Government to adopt a compassionate approach to asylum-seekers.
撮影日2014-12-10 15:33:22
撮影者lovemakesaway , Australia
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