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VoTCS

Volunteer Refugee Tutoring & Community Support
 
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WE NEED TUTORS!

Currently we require tutors for Brisbane including some who are able to tutor in the suburbs listed below.

North: Chermside, Zillmere, Bracken Ridge
South West: Inala, Acacia Ridge, Sunnybank, Coopers Plains, Eight Mile Plains.
West: Ipswich, Collingwood Park, Goodna.
South: Logan, Woodridge, Beenleigh, including suburbs such as Crestmead, Marsden, Slack's Creek, Kingston and Waterford.

If you are interested in becoming a tutor or would like to know more about what we do, you can find out more about the refugee tutoring program here.

We hold Intake nights every 8 weeks for new tutors. To become a tutor, you will need to attend three compulsory training sessions: Intake Sessions 1, 2 and 3. Visit the Upcoming Events page to find details of the next training and to register.

Refugee Tutoring
 
Home arrow About Refugees arrow What is an asylum seeker?

What is an asylum seeker?

Despite the terms “refugees” and “asylum seekers” often being used interchangeably, they in fact refer to people in different, but often overlapping, circumstances.

Refugees:

  • have fled their country because of a well-founded fear of persecution; and
  • may or may not have had access to apply to a country for asylum as a country they may be in may not be a signatory to the Refugees Convention.  Also, they may be unable to access relevant embassies in that country and/or may not wish to seek asylum in another country.

Asylum seekers:

  • are applying to a country other than their own for legal protection;
  • must find the means to reach a country, or the embassy of a country, that is party to the Refugees Convention where they can apply for asylum.  In the process they usually face enormous risks to their safety;
  • Have the right to apply for protection from a country that has signed the Refugees Convention; and
  • Are not criminals even if the Government describes them as “unauthorised”, “unlawful” or “illegal”.

Not all asylum seekers arrive by boat.  Some asylum seekers who come to Australia enter with a visitors’, student or other temporary visa. Some arrive with no documents or with false documents.
 
Arriving without appropriate papers should not be interpreted as an attempt to defraud the system. By definition, refugees and asylum seekers are people who are at risk of persecution, most often from their government.  Applying for a passport and/or an exit visa can be far too dangerous for some refugees; so too can be an approach to an Australian Embassy for a visa.  These actions can put their lives, and those of their families, at risk.  In such cases refugees may have to travel on forged documents or bypass regular migration channels and arrive without papers.  In other situations, refugees have to flee immediately and do not have the opportunity to gather the correct paperwork before they leave their homes.

Because boat arrivals receive much publicity, it is often thought that the number of asylum seekers entering Australia is increasing.  According to the Refugee Council of Australia, the number of asylum applications lodged in Australia decreased from 12,366 in 2001 to 5,766 in 2002.  By comparison approximately 12,500 tourist visa holders were removed in breach of visa conditions in 2002-2003.

Under the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR), “everyone has the right to seek and enjoy in other countries asylum from persecution” (Article 14).  Therefore, asylum seekers have a right to stay in Australia while their application is being determined.


Summary

In summary, all refugees have at one time been asylum seekers but once their status is recognised, it is no is no longer appropriate to use this term.

Some asylum seekers are refugees, however under Australian law the granting of refugee status is required to make it official and allow the person access to the support they need.

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VoRTCS is a special works of
St Vincent de Paul Society - good works
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