Ross
B. Taylor AM
Did you hear about the young Aussie guy who had a
‘difficult’ situation arise whilst visiting a Bangkok massage parlour? The
story goes that the young man was less than happy about his experience and
decided to trash the entire parlour, resulting in his arrest and subsequently being
charged by Thai police for wilful damage, assault and threatening behaviour.
As an Australian citizen, the man then sought
assistance from the consular section of the Australian Embassy in terms of
resolving his predicament and legal costs. Not cheap in a foreign country.
This story is only one of many tales about
Australians getting into serious trouble whilst overseas and then seeking help
– at no cost to themselves – of Australian consular officials to assist them.
Apart from officials handling enquiries such as,
“Can you help me with feeding my dog whilst I am away on holidays?”, or, “Will
the sand in Egypt affect my asthma?”, Australian consular officials are finding
themselves trapped by consecutive governments cutting back the number of
diplomatic staff in overseas postings, whilst the numbers of Australians
travelling overseas is booming like never before.
Last year Australians made an astonishing eight
million overseas visits and over 50% all Australians now hold a current
passport, with 1.7 million new passports being issued in 2012 alone.
Bali remains our favourite destination with almost
900,000 Aussies travelling to their paradise island in the past twelve months. Over
380,000 visitors were from WA, and many of these tourists were young people
heading-off overseas for the first or second time. And herein lays the danger:
In past years almost all overseas travel was arranged by an experienced travel
agent. Today, it’s just a simple job to ‘jump online’ and book your low-cost
airline ticket and hotel within minutes.
With Bali only three hours away, what is often
overlooked are the ‘essentials’ such as travel insurance and importantly,
advice that when overseas you are subject to the laws and rules of a foreign
country. Sadly on too many occasions this lack of knowledge, or just plain lack
of respect, sees Australians either in trouble with the law or injured as a
result of their own stupidity, ignorance or bad behaviour.
It is at this point when the local Australian
Consulate is contacted for assistance. And Australian consulate officials –
including our consulate in Bali who dealt with 301 specific cases last year
plus ‘numerous general enquiries’ regarding assistance - have a very good record of prompt and efficient service to
Australians in need. But with this boom in travel, combined with a reduction in
the number of consular staff based overseas, something had to give.
This dilemma has recently lead Australia’s foreign
minister to examine whether Australians, who get themselves into trouble overseas
as a direct result of their bad behaviour, should contribute to the cost
incurred by our government in order to assist them.
Greenpeace activist, Colin Russell was a
case-in-point as he obviously felt he had the ‘entitlement’, as an Australian
passport holder, to unlimited support from our government after being arrested
for illegally climbing onto a Russian oil rig in the Arctic as part of a
protest. Despite Russell being a paid employee of Greenpeace, the Australian
Government and the foreign minister spent significant amounts of time and
taxpayers funds in order to secure his release from a Russian jail-which they
successfully did.
As to whether Russell had a ‘moral issue’ to fight
is a separate matter. The question is should the Australian taxpayer fork-up
every time a protestor seeks to take-on a foreign country?
Likewise back in Bali, should a drunken tourist from
Perth who ends up being arrested for fighting and abusing local staff have the
right to expect the Australian Government to not only get him out of jail but
to also cover all his costs associated with the crime he committed?
This issue is not about taking a hard line against
Australians who through no fault of their own find themselves in serious
trouble whilst overseas. Most Australians rightly would expect that our
government should be ready to help our citizens where they can; remembering of
course that our consular officials have no power to override local laws and to
direct police. They also cannot guarantee a standard of hospital care
equivalent to that which we enjoy back home in Australia.
As Treasurer Joe Hockey tells us that the ‘Age of
Entitlement’ must end and that we need to modify our expectations as to
what the government can provide, so to should Australians who travel overseas
need to modify their expectations about how much their government should and can
do when they get into trouble. And when the predicament is caused by their own
misbehaviour or recklessness then perhaps they should make a financial
contribution to getting themselves out of trouble.
A harder line by our
government on this issue is well overdue and it may also force many travelling
Aussies to take responsibly for their own actions whilst overseas; actions that
should start with acting responsibly and respectfully whist a guess of another
country.Ross B. Taylor
February 2014
ross.taylor@indonesia-institute.org.au
www.indonesia-institute.org.au
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