Latest news with #SaminaYasmeen


SBS Australia
12-08-2025
- Politics
- SBS Australia
Australia to recognise Palestinian state – how will it affect the Middle East conflict?
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has announced that Australia will officially recognise Palestine as a state. The opposition is concerned that this announcement could widen the gap between Australia and the United States. Senior opposition member Angus Taylor stated that established conditions should be met before formally recognising Palestine. Professor Samina Yasmeen (AM), Director of the Centre for Muslim States and Societies and Professor of Political Science and International Relations at the University of Western Australia, Perth, believes that recognising the Palestinian state could create opportunities for "restoring peace in the future. Ben Saul, the United Nations Special Rapporteur on Human Rights and Counter-Terrorism, said that recognition could enhance the legal and diplomatic rights of the Palestinian authorities, such as granting state immunity under Australian law. Foreign Minister Penny Wong stated that the plan is for both an Israeli state and a Palestinian state, each providing security for their peoples. The Israeli ambassador to Australia said that this decision will "strengthen Hamas" and weaken efforts for peace. ___ SBS Urdu is on Instagram , Facebook and YouTube. Our SBS Audio app is available for Apple and Android devices. Listen on Spotify or Apple Podcasts. Listen Wednesday and Friday programs at this link.


SBS Australia
10-05-2025
- Politics
- SBS Australia
Is the India-Pakistan conflict spilling over to Australia and could it get worse?
Demonstrations in both Pakistan and India have broken out in support of their respective nations' military operations. Credit: Hindustan Times / Sipa USA / Anjum Naveed / AP As tensions between India and Pakistan escalate, some fear "division" is growing between the two diaspora communities in Australia. The two countries have been , after India launched airstrikes on Wednesday targeting what it said was "terrorist infrastructure" in Pakistan. Pakistan has denied India's accusations that it was involved in the tourist attack, in which 26 civilians were killed. Now, some community members in Australia have said the ongoing conflict, considered India and Pakistan's worst in decades, could affect social cohesion here. Samina Yasmeen, a Pakistani-Australian and a professor at the University of Western Australia, said "some tension among some sections" of the community has already emerged. "There are some sections of the community that probably are active in this space where they're looking at the other side, whether it's India or Pakistan, as the enemy, and then talking about it," she told SBS News. "But if we look at it broadly, the South Asian community in Australia has traditionally been very friendly and cooperative towards each other." People born in India and Pakistan make up a huge part of Australia's multicultural community. About 670,000 people in Australia were born in India, while there were almost 90,000 who were born in Pakistan, according to the 2021 Census. Some Indian community leaders have also said that, since the tensions have increased, they haven't observed a general sign of tension between these two communities. "They have been sensible. There has not been major commentary about this matter except for rare occasions or rare people," Yadu Singh, a spokesperson of the Federation of Indian Associations of NSW, told SBS News. He's concerned that, should tensions between India and Pakistan escalate into an "all-out" war, things could change in Australia. "There is a real risk, real potential that those tensions in that part of the world may end up coming here," Singh said. "And communities involved from both countries may have protests ... And that may inflame the situation. And therefore, [a] confrontation situation can arise." While there have not been any major protests by either community about the conflict, tension has been visible online. Some have made social media posts calling on their compatriots to boycott goods from the other side. Others urge store owners not to stock items produced in the other country. Nadeem, a founder of an Indian community group on Facebook, said he has witnessed these posts. "Australia is home to vibrant Indian, Pakistani and South Asian communities ... All my life, I've seen Indian, Pakistani, and all of them are working together," he told SBS News. "But whenever these things happen, it does create a bit of division. "South Asian people, we are very emotional, and whatever happens back home, it just affects the community here as well." SBS News has seen a WhatsApp message sent to an Indian-Australian from their home country, which warns that Indians in Australia will have to "co-exist with Pakistanis who are increasingly going to get hostile". Yasmeen believes that, while those responsible for such posts and messages may be small in number, they "can definitely be louder" than other members of their communities. "Because we live in such a cyber-filled life these days, they can be very loud on social media, and that's where they can try and recruit others who follow their narrative," she explained. "In international politics and also in terms of social cohesion, it's really the role of narratives as they start emerging, as they start being shared by people, they change the views of the people who are exposed to those narratives." Concerns are growing among the community leaders and experts like Yasmeen that the rising tension between countries may potentially affect social cohesion — a principle that Australian community leaders and politicians have increasingly stressed in recent times. "Generally, social cohesion is about how a society can trust each other and we can have common goals and common values and principles that we can we can call ourselves a community," Rojan Afrouz, a senior lecturer in social work at RMIT University, told SBS News. Given the multicultural makeup of Australia, war and conflicts overseas may impact the index. "Different groups here, obviously still have some kind of intergenerational understanding of their identity and also the conflict in their origin country and in their homeland," Afrouz explained. "What's going on in their homeland will definitely impact how they will react to that context, and also how they will react to their intergenerational understanding of conflict ... Obviously, all of those will impact the sense of community, trusting each other." In August 2024, Mike Burgess, director-general of the Australian Security Intelligence Organisation, said that the war in Gaza had "undermined social cohesion" in Australia. Both Indian and Pakistani community leaders are calling for members of the diaspora to preserve social cohesion in Australia while their home countries are under attack. "It does require all the communities to work together to make sure that instead of promoting the narrative of hatred, we actually get together and say it's time to stop the hostilities," Yasmeen said. Singh echoes her sentiment. "All of us are part of multicultural Australia. We all love Australia," he said. "We should not bring overseas foreign matters to the shores of Australia because this is a country which we all belong to." World Australia India Mike Burgess Share this with family and friends