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Boochani: Asylum seeker on Manus wins Australian literature prize | News

A Kurdish asylum seeker has won one of the most important Australian literature prizes, the Victorian Prize for Literature.

However, Iranian Kurd Behrouz Boochani was unable to accept the award personally in Melbourne because he is being kept in the offshore detention centre on Manus Island.

Boochani won the award, which comes with a monetary prize of $73,000, for his book “No Friend but the Mountains: Writing from Manus Prison” which was written in Farsi while he was held in the detention centre that has now been closed.

It comprises of text messages sent mostly through WhatsApp to the translator.

The book was also judged to be the best non-fiction book.

Boochani has been living in the detention centre on Manus Island since 2013, and like all detainees, is not allowed to leave the island.

“It’s a paradoxical feeling,” said Boochani.

“I don’t want to celebrate this achievement while I still see many innocent people suffering around me,” he told The Age daily. “Give us freedom. We have committed no crime, we are only seeking asylum.”

He fled Iran as he was in danger of being arrested by authorities over his journalism work.

Boochani attempted to reach Australia by boat from Indonesia twice.

On his first attempt, the boat sank and Boochani was rescued by Indonesian fishermen. 

In July 2013, his boat, which had 75 asylum seekers, was intercepted by the Australian Navy and he was transferred to the Manus Island detention centre.

Manus is a territory belonging to Papua New Guinea, but it has been used by Canberra since 2013 as a place to send asylum seekers who try to reach Australia.

The practice has been denounced as contravening the migrants’ and detainees’ human rights.

Many congratulated Boochani on Twitter but also criticised Australia’s “hypocrisy” and “cognitive dissonance”.

“I think it’s so great that Behrouz Boochani won the VPLA for nonfiction tonight, but I’m also struggling with the cognitive dissonance of a nation celebrating the story, the work, of a man we’re still torturing,” author Omar Sakr wrote on Twitter.

“[He] is still imprisoned, and kept stateless by us. We must free them.”

“Does anyone else see the jarring hypocrisy of a country that is applauding a literary achievement with one hand and torturing the author with the other?” another wrote.

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