It isn't only refugees in detention centres who try to kill themselves - many Australians suicide also as they can see no other way out of their predicament.
ANNA Hamilton is not that different from you. Except that until last week she was sleeping rough - rejected by a bureaucracy that homelessness groups say is tightening the purse strings.
This story may leave you thinking she's too normal to be on the streets. But Ms Hamilton is the changing face of homelessness. And were it not for coincidence, she could be dead.
Ms Hamilton, 49, was a police officer for a dozen years and a flight attendant for another five. Things began to go wrong four years ago when she had to sell her home at a loss after discovering the slab was cracked.
Broke, she had to live in her car. Shortly after she lost her job as an insurance investigator. Then she lost her car. She was homeless.
"I used to think homeless people made choices to be where they were," Ms Hamilton said.
"But it doesn't take too much to fracture your security. I liken homelessness to being on life support - your heart still beats, you breathe in and out but there are no other signs of life. At some time it becomes necessary to switch the machine off."
Two Saturday nights ago, Ms Hamilton decided that time had come. She was camping under an awning of the Campbelltown Civic Centre after Housing NSW turned her down for rental assistance - by text message.
She wasn't the only one sheltering under that awning.
Suburban homelessness is soaring. Sydney's Homeless Person's Information Centre received 3517 calls for help from the Campbelltown area in 2011, compared with 1417 in 2008.
"We are drowning out here," said Jane McIvor, director of Sector Connect, the umbrella group for not-for-profits in Sydney's southwest.
http://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/news/s ... 6294040564" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;