I write this to express my deep sympathy support for Ranjini and many others like her. But I also write this out of anxiety for others like myself, who have not fallen foul of the “law” – as yet. I am also an immigrant from Sri Lanka, a voluntary one, not a refugee, who saw in Australia a country where the justice system seemed to function better than the those back home. But the “war on terror” seems to have suspended all that. People being held indefinitely without trial is one of the most common “crimes” that western governments, Australia too, accuse those “dictatorial / inhumane / undemocratic” regimes of. What’s the difference? What if they come for one of us tomorrow? And judging by how David Hicks was treated – it could be any one. Not just a recent immigrant from the wrong country or a refugee who thought she had found refuge. And the bitter irony? Sri Lanka has managed to find it in themselves to include two former rebel leaders, self-confessed mass killers, as Ministers in Government, but the widows and children of former fighters cannot apparently be given another chance at life, even here in Australia. Marisa is not, of course, my real name. I am sorry, but I just don’t feel comfortable writing this under my own name. What if I get a negative ASIO assessment too? I just hope enough people get behind this appeal not only for Ranjini, but for all of us. To make sure that Australia doesn’t forget its values and gives everyone a fair go.