Imagine Sydney. Sprawled over the coastal plain between beach and Blue
Mountains, hemmed in by the bushy ridges of national parks to north and
south, home to nearly four million. This is Australia's global city for
which the world is its hinterland. It is home to most of the transnational
corporations in Australia, whose headquarters are clustered in a slice of
the city bordered by the suburb of Ryde in the north and the international
airport in the south, a global sector in which live the relatively
affluent workers of the 'new economy' – finance, education, media,
entertainment, information and communications technology.
Now imagine the zone where city meets country, where rural fields are
consumed by an expanding patchwork of tiled roofs, a place inhabited by
young families for whom life can sometimes be an economic struggle, but a
struggle offset by the experience of becoming a first-home buyer. Out here
on the urban fringe the young families are not alone – they have been
joined by another group who are deserting the older suburbs of the western
and south-western core: people fleeing the increasing crime of that zone.
In Sydney's concentric geography of wealth, this suburban core houses the
declining blue-collar industries of the 'old' economy. It is a zone with
pockets of environmental decay, social stress and unemployment. This
middle-ring of suburbs, this suburban core covering the lands westward of
the harbour is also home to another demographic in Australia's changing
make-up – immigrant enclaves.
Why enclave make sense
When they arrive in Australia, immigrants cluster in enclaves among
people who have already pioneered the path into a strange country. Here
they find the company, the cultural institutions, the services and support
that over time eases their way into the wider society. There, they become
part of the Australian multicultural experiment.
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But there is a dark side to living in the ethnic enclaves and it comes
from their location in that ageing ring of industrial and residential
suburbs. This dark side takes the form of social disadvantage,
unemployment and discrimination, made all the worse by the widespread
perception that it is in these enclaves that the problem of ethnic crime
starts.
Ethnic crime has become a political football in the lead-up the the NSW
state election, but the fact that groups – 'gangs', as they are called
– made up of youth of the same ethnic origin are involved in crime is
not in dispute. What is in dispute is the labelling of some ethnic
populations as more prone to crime, especially crimes of violence, than
other groups or the Australian population in general. Representatives of
these groups claim that entire ethnic communities are victimised when
offences carried out by people from their group is labelled as 'ethnic
crime'. They say, rightly, that a few criminals does not make criminals of
an entire community. But others are not so certain. A recent Four
Corners documentary on ethnic crime, broadcast on ABC TV, left
open the answer as to whether members of some ethnic communities have a
greater propensity for involvement in crime.
Exporting violence
A recent report on ethnic crime in Sydney, 'Sydney, Gangs, Crime and
Community Safety: Perceptions and Experiences in Multicultural Sydney',
found that members of ethnic communities are also the victims of crime and
feel safest in their own areas. While this can be seen as evidence that
they face a threat when they venture outside their own areas – that
would fit the claim by some Sydney Moslems that they have been abused and
assaulted since September 11 2001, others with a line to push on ethnic
crime could equally use the report's findings as evidence that members of
ethnic crime gangs export their crime to places inhabited by other ethnic
groups.
At the current time, it is the Lebanese and Arab communities,
especially Lebanese Moslems, that are the focus of the ethnic crime
discussion. Their representatives say that the entire community has been
damned for the pack rape of a number of young Australian women, a crime
which saw Judge Michael Finnane sentence a gang leader to 55 years in
prison. During the case it was documented that at least one of the gang
members said that Australian women had been targetted because they were
Australian. If anything was to put fear into the broader community and
create the perception that the gang represented racist attitudes existing
in the Lebanese community, that was it.
Interestingly, Sydney's Chinese community has escaped universal blame
for the crimes of ethnic criminal organisations such as extortion, acts of
violence, drug smuggling and dealing, despite claims of a connection to
the fabled 'triads' or lesser gangs. Perhaps this is due to the perception
that Chinese crime gangs keep their activities mainly within their own
community while the Lebanese gangs are seen to act out their violence
outside their ethnic group.
After the rape case, representatives of the Lebanese Moslem community
admitted publicly that their community did have a crime problem and should
do something about it. Their case was not helped by the assault resulting
in injury to an SBS television news crew gathering community comment
outside the Lakemba mosque. That incident, rather than the opinion of
members of the Lebanese Moslem community, quickly became the news. Nor was
their case helped when a householder turned a garden hose on a television
news crew filming news footage in a street after police raided several
homes and seized property. For viewers, both these attacks simply
confirmed that this particular ethnic group had no respect for the role of
the media in a democracy, no respect for law and shared a preference for
confrontational and violent acts.
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So, what are the solutions?
Combine the controversy and public perceptions stemming from the rape
case, perceptions about ethnic crime and fears about terrorism and Islam
engendered by September 11, John Howard's asylum seeker and border
protection policies and Pauline Hanson's earlier work and it is easy to
see how multiculturalism is being destabilised as a political philosophy
in this country. And, though their motives may be humanitarian at their
core, the actions of the vocal and politically naive 'open borders' lobby
only adds to what are widespread public fears about ethnicity, crime and
terrorism.
This is a fact – about 80% of the Australian population support the
federal government's border protection policy. The dithering of what
passes for an opposition party searching for its lost soul, or for a new
one, means that there is little mainstream opposition to Howard's policy.
The main opposition is the open-borders mob but their actions scare the
hell out of the public although people are concerned that asylum seekers,
particularly children, may be treated improperly.
If some element of reality is to be injected into this fractious
debate, and some attempt made to create a sense of clarity, then the
'serious' (as opposed to talkback entertainment) media needs to continue
the better examples of its work in this direction. At the same time, the
representatives of ethnic groups should cease viewing the media as if it
was some undifferentiated unity and the cause of ethnic stereotyping.
These same representatives must also admit that some ethnic communities do
have a serious crime and attitudinal problem, and take remedial action.
And the politically correct in the Australian community must cease
diverting attention from the core of the discussion to the periphery by
telling us how to talk about this issue and instead engage in robust
debate, even if some words offend them. Multiculturalism in Australia is
up for grabs and both its supporters and detractors must be heard if we
are to seriously reappraise it in these times of change. That is the way
of democracy.