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Confessions of a People-Smuggler

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Dawood Amiri is an ethnic Hazara who, as a young man, made the fateful decision to flee the terror being inflicted on his people, and seek asylum in Australia. He arrived in Indonesia in 2010, but was eventually captured when he was about to board a boat headed for Christmas Island. After a long stint in detention, where immigration processes failed to help him, he escaped and began working for people-smugglers to aid his fellow asylum-seekers, and to raise money for his own passage to Australia.

Amiri was eventually arrested as a people-smuggler himself, after having helped gather passengers for a boat that was recklessly overloaded by his bosses and sank en route to Christmas Island, with the loss of 96 lives.

Among the dead were two of Amiri's best friends; that day, he 'swore at God'. He was sentenced to six years' jail in Jakarta's Cipinang prison, while the kingpins, at the time, remained free.

A revelatory tale of compassion, love, sacrifice, and survival, Confessions of a People-Smuggler is a surprising insight into the desperation of asylum-seekers and the economics of the highly organised people-smuggling industry, as well as the corruption that has enabled it.

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    • Books+Publishing

      June 19, 2014

      Dawood Amiri fled Afghanistan with his family when he was a boy and settled in Quetta, Pakistan. He had hoped to establish a career as an accountant, but the rise of the Taliban meant his life was in danger. Amiri decided the best course of action was to make his way to Australia. In 2010 he arrived in Indonesia, and was ready to travel by boat to Christmas Island, when he was caught. Desperately short of money, he started working for people-smugglers. He was eventually arrested (one of the boats he organised sank, killing 96 asylum seekers, including two of Amiri’s friends) and sentenced to six years in Jakarta’s Cipinang prison. Confessions of a People Smuggler shows the human side of those fleeing their home countries and seeking asylum. Amiri’s story is one of unrelenting horror, tragedy and hopelessness; it reads like a mix between Hieronymus Bosch and Kafka. Amiri himself saw people-smuggling as noble humanitarian work ‘to help my brother asylum-seekers’, work he did with ‘purity and pain in my heart’. Confessions of a People Smuggler is starkly written and compelling, and will appeal to anyone seeking a more realistic, first-hand picture of the asylum seeker issue. It takes you into an underworld of desperate, stateless and unwanted people and shows a reality that so many of us turn away from. 

      Chris Saliba is co-owner of North Melbourne Books and a freelance reviewer

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  • English

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