Australian Professor Gets Standing Ovation In Parliament After Prison
Матеріал з Луцький НВК "Гімназія №14"
An Australian professor who survived 650 days in one of 's worst prisons has received a standing ovation in parliament.
Economics professor Sean Turnell battled rats, scorpions and multiple bouts of while imprisoned in Burma's Insein jail on trumped-up charges.
The academic was there at the invitation of democratically elected leader Aung San Suu Kyi to advise on economic reforms when she was overthrown by a military coup in February, 2021.
Prof Turnell was finally released by the military junta two weeks ago and reunited with his wife Dr Ha Vu in Bangkok, then returned to Australia.
The couple were special guests at in the Australian House of Representatives during Question Time on Thursday, where they received a standing ovation.
Sean Turnell was finally released by the military junta two weeks ago and reunited with his wife Dr Ha Vu in Bangkok, then returned to Australia
All of the House's 151 members who were present stood to applaud and cheer as the couple stood on the side of the chamber floor.
Prof Turnell gave a thumbs up and squeezed his wife's hand as they were honoured by the Parliament.
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese then rose to pay tribute to the released Australian and his 'magnificent wife' after he was rescued from the clutches of a regime that 'has trashed human rights in Myanmar.
'What he endured in his 650 days of incarceration is something no human being should have to endure,' he said.
'Yet he has done it with grace and even with inhumane conditions with profound humanity, our relief and joy at your release is also tinged with no small amount of awe, awe and respect that your courage, optimism and resilience.
'We are so glad as seen in the response across the chamber to have you back.'
Mr Albanese then turned to Dr Vu and acknowledged her suffering in not knowing if she would ever see her husband again.
'There must've been times when you felt like you are in a prison of a different nature but your determination and advocacy and the power of your love will prove greater than the hate and everything your beloved husband were up against,' he said.
The couple were special guests at in the Australian House of Representatives during Question Time on Thursday
Prof Turnell and Dr Vu received a standing ovation from the entire House
The PM then paid tribute to diplomats whose efforts gave the couple 'glimmers of hope' and politicians on both sides for the roles in Prof Turnell's release.
'Prof Turnell struck me with his humility upon his release. It was quite extraordinary. I am so pleased that he is now looking, it must be said a fair bit healthier,' he said.
'After an awful time. Most of all, I want to thank Prof Turnell for being here today and for displaying the absolute best of the Australian spirit.'
Opposition Leader Peter Dutton echoed the prime minister's words and recalled how all Prof Turnell wanted when he returned was a pub meal.
'It went on for way too long and we were up against a very significant adversity and in the end your bravery has shone through,' he said.
'The demeanour and grace with which you have carried yourself, Sean, is quite remarkable, given what you've gone through and the passion you have for the cause you were fighting for.
'We just acknowledge what you as a family have gone through, the pain, the separation and the pressure that puts on individuals and the relationship, the anxiety, now the love you can share which is shared by our nation and we wish you every success in the future.'
All of the House's 151 members who were present stood to applaud and and many cheered them as they stood on the side of the chamber floor
Mr Albanese had a longer talk with Prof Turnell and Dr Vu after other MPs greeted them
Prof Turnell and his wife later met with Mr Albanese and Foreign Minister Penny Wong
Numerous MPs then lined up to shake their hands, including Scott Morrison, who played a role in Prof Turnell's release negotiations while he was still prime minister.
Mr Morrison patiently waited at the end of the line before having a chat with the couple while Question Time continued.
When he was finished, Mr Albanese got up and had a longer talk with Prof Turnell and Dr Vu, before Mr Dutton walked them out of the chamber.
Prof Turnell and his wife also received applause in the Senate, where Foreign Minister Penny Wong welcomed them back to Australia.
'I know I speak for all Australians when I say we are so pleased to have you back here in Australia,' she said.
'No one should have to endure what you did, and that you've emerged from such an experience with humanity and humour intact is truly remarkable.'
Opposition foreign affairs spokesman Simon Birmingham thanked the returned professor for his conduct and his continued advocacy for the people of Myanmar.
'Noting that your engagement in Myanmar was one that helped others, to deliver for others, and that the price you paid was an immense one,' he said.
'We know you will continue to work hard wherever you can for the people of Myanmar.'
Prof Turnell earlier this week explained how having been warned he was in danger, he was attempting to flee the country when he was arrested as he was paying for his stay at a hotel.
'I could feel the policeman forming in behind me out of the corner of my eyes, I could just, yeah, there was around 20 or 30 of them beginning to move in on me,' Prof Turnell told after his release.
'And yeah, by then it was all over.'
Prof Turnell was charged with a breach of the Official Secrets Act, which meant he was being accused of being a spy.
'In the early interrogation, they... told me very directly, you work for MI6,' he said.
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For the first two months of his captivity Prof Turnell endured solitary confinement in what he described as a bare concrete cell that was like a 'shipping container'.
The 58-year-old believed he was being held just outside the notorious Insein prison near Myanmar's former capital of Yangon.
'I was in this terrible place that I called 'the box', which was just this windowless room where I was just held for the first two months,' he said.
'No windows, concrete floor, metal chair, bolted to the floor in the middle of the room, ankle chains and wrist chains which were put on me at various points, but yeah, devoid of any reading material, anything to stimulate your mind.'
A view inside the crumbling Insein jail, where Prof Turnell was held and exposed to the elements as well as rats and 'giant scorpions'
Prof Turnell was held in the notorious Insein prison, which is near Myanmar's former capital of Yangon
To keep active Prof Turnell began pacing 'like a zoo animal' and challenged himself to mental tasks such as naming all the Australian prime ministers or American presidents.
Despite these efforts Prof Turnell said there were times of deep despair.
'I was thinking, how on earth does a sort of, you know, mild mannered little professor from Australia end up here?' he said.
'This was one of south-east Asia's most notorious prisons ... there were many dark times in that, but I would sort of pull myself together.
'I knew the support that was coming from outside and so I thought, well okay, you've just got to get through this. It'll be OK.'
Prof Turnell said the only human contact he had during this period were interrogators who would come in at odd hours, such as the middle of the night.
He said the sessions started with 'stupid' questions for which there were no answers, which he believed were designed to intimidate and demoralise him.
He was also told: 'You'll never see your wife and Filma te ndryshem child again.'
'But then after a while, they started to hone in a bit more to try and trap me to say something about Aung San Suu Kyi,' Prof Turnell said.
'They would have one of the interrogators in front of me, and then the other would wander behind me.
'And again, I'm sort of chained to this chair and I couldn't quite see them. But I always felt, you know, that I might be struck or anything like that.'
Prof Turnell has been reunited with his wife Vu Ha who fought tirelessly for his release and baked him treats that kept his spirits up
Despite these torturous conditions Prof Turnell said the worst physical experience was being driven in a van to a court hearing.
'And this van, meant to hold around 20 people, there were 50 of us,' he said.
'We were all chained together, pushed into the back of the van.
'The heat was terrific, and sweat was pouring down, people were vomiting around me, and fainting. But we're all locked in so tightly that you sort of couldn't fall which was a saving grace.'
The main entrance to Myanmar's notorious Insein prison, where Prof Turnell was forced to shovel out food from a communal bucket
Prof Turnell is shown getting vaccinated against Covid in this official handout shot from July
After two months he was moved into the main Insein jail.
'The physical environment was horrible,' Prof Turnell said.
'It was a concrete cell with old rusty iron bars, completely open to the elements ... (which) means monsoon, it means incredible heat.
'It means insects, rats, these horrible big scorpions that will come into the cell.'
Prof Turnell said he frequently fell ill.
'I got Covid multiple times, you'll get stomach issues because again, the food was neither good nor served in sanitary conditions,' he said.
Food was served in a communal bucket which prisoners in turn served themselves with a spoon.
'In Insein prison, it was a proper bucket,' Prof Turnell said.
'In Naypyidaw, Myanmar's capital where I was shifted up for the trial, it wasn't even that.
'They were dirty old construction buckets that had been full of paint and the paint stains remained on the outside and this very thin bean soup was sort of put in and another bucket would have rice in it.
'By the time you get the bucket you might be 50 people into the process and so if somebody else has got a disease, it's going to be in the food.'
Sean Turnell poses with Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade head of mission in Myanmar, Angela Corcoran, after being freed
Prof Kelly said many people have told him how brave his wife (pictured left) was in fighting for his release
It wasn't until six weeks into his imprisonment that Prof Turnell was allowed to talk to his wife Ha Vu and their daughter, who live in Melbourne.
Prof Turnell was denied further contact for a period of months, however the Australian embassy began supplying him with necessities.
Eventually this extended to his wife's cooking.
'So my wife baked ANZAC cookies, raisin oatmeal cookies, her wonderful fruitcake, which is always lots of alcohol in it to preserve it,' Prof Turnell said.
'She would cook them here in Sydney, seal them in airtight bags, send them to Canberra, where they would go in the diplomatic pouch, from Canberra to Yangon and then be delivered to me and not a single one went bad.
'That was wonderful because, again, it can really smell like home. Like I used to open the bags and just smell the aroma of the baking and it was such a good moment.'
Prof Turnell was acting as an economic advisor to democratically elected leader Aung San Suu Kyi who was overthrown by a military coup in February, 2021
Prof Turnell said his wife fought bravely for his release.
'I mean, as it turns out, she rose to the occasion, extraordinarily, and, you know, the one constant comment I've got since coming home from all sorts of people, people around the world is just how extraordinarily strong she was,' Prof Turnell said.
Prof Turnell described his trial in September as a 'complete charade'.
'I knew from the beginning, there wasn't any process,' he said
'That as soon as the charges were laid, the verdict was 100 per cent assured.'
After being found sentenced to three years jail Prof Turnell was delivered an almost miraculous reprieve when he was released in November after being part of an amnesty given by the military regime as an international gesture of 'goodwill'.
'A couple of the young prison guards came up to me and said, "Sean, good news. You're going home",' Prof Turnell said.
Prof Turnell, here seen at an official function in Myanmar, described himself a 'mild-mannered professor'
'And I said to them, 'Look, you're not kidding, are you?'
'They said they weren't, and I had about 10 minutes then to pack everything and be taken out of the cell.'
He was reunited with his wife at Melbourne airport 10 days ago
'It was just a magical moment... we just ran to each other and collided like a scene in the movies,' he said.
Prof Turnell said he was humbled by the efforts of his wife and many others, such as Prime Minister Anthony Albanese and Foreign Minister Penny Wong, had made to secure his release,
'The incredible work that so many people have done and like, I'm in awe of it, frankly,' he said.
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