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Poorer Sydney suburbs on edge over army deployment

09-08-2021

Bureau Report

SYDNEY: “If the objective was to frighten the hell out of the community, I can guarantee you they have done that.”

Dai Le, a local councilor in Sydney, is speaking angrily about the deployment of 300 military personnel to the city’s streets this week.

Her constituency, Fairfield, is one of eight areas in Sydney considered the epicenter of Australia’s biggest COVID outbreak in a year.

These poorer and ethnically diverse suburbs in Sydney’s west and south west are home to about two million residents. Many are considered essential workers in food, health and other industries.

The soldiers arrive almost a month after police deployed an extra 100 officers to the area to enforce lockdown rules.

“I feel we’ve been treated like second-class citizens,” Ms Le says.

“They have killed people’s confidence; they have triggered so much fear. What is this message? What is it doing to a community that’s already under siege?”

As Sydney scrambles to contain a Delta outbreak that has grown to more than 4,000 active cases and 27 deaths, these suburbs have been put under harsher restrictions than elsewhere.

A citywide lockdown will last until at least 28 August. But unlike other Sydneysiders, these residents have been told to wear masks even outdoors. They cannot travel more than 5km (three miles) when leaving home for essential reasons, less than the 10km afforded to others. There are also stricter limits on who can work.

New South Wales (NSW) authorities say these measures are designed to stop infections in the worst-hit areas, with the virus spreading from workplaces to large households.

Police Minister David Elliott told local media a small minority of Sydney residents thought the rules “didn’t apply to them”.

Dai Le calls the measures “authoritarian”. She and other critics have accused authorities of double standards, arguing Sydney’s affluent eastern suburbs such as Bondi – where the outbreak began – have been treated differently.

“It feels like an invisible wall has been created around these eight local government areas,” she says. “The thing that enrages me is that we did not even start it.”

An ‘extra level of anxiety’

Arwa Abousamra, an author and Arabic interpreter, also lives in south-west Sydney, where a large portion of people have Middle Eastern, Vietnamese and Chinese heritage. She says she and many in the community have felt on edge.

“I have seen police every single time I’ve left my home,” she says. “I have not been stopped, but I can honestly tell you I feel anxious leaving, almost practicing what I’m going to say to a police officer when they stop me.

She acknowledges police have a “very difficult job”, but argues it shouldn’t be this one: “It’s always been a health and resources matter. I think the army is just going add that extra level of anxiety for people.”

Many refugees and asylum seekers live in Sydney’s west and south west. Having escaped war-torn countries and oppressive regimes, encounters with the military or law enforcement can be traumatic.

“Police presence [has] caused a lot of angst among members of the community who come from those parts of the world where the police would have been an extension or an arm of the regime they were escaping,” Abousamra says.

Dr Omar Khorshid, the president of the Australian Medical Association, argues restrictions should be the same across Sydney.

“Simple rules that apply to everyone have a much better chance of working than focused complex rules,” he tweeted.

What makes the situation in these areas even more complicated is the language barrier. Many families don’t speak English as a first language. In the past few weeks, state government rules have changed fast and often; all in a language many do not speak fluently. (BBC)

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