Australia boat people plan wins crucial support
AUSTRALIA: Plans to transfer asylum-seekers who arrive in Australia
by boat to Pacific states won crucial support Tuesday, with Prime
Minister Julia Gillard saying they could be processed offshore within a
month.
Canberra has struggled to stem an influx of boatpeople who make the
dangerous sea voyage to Australia, and on Monday said it would move to
handle their refugee claims on Nauru and Papua New Guinea.
“Within a month we would hope to see people processed on Nauru and
Papua New Guinea,” Gillard said, adding that she had spoken to the
leaders of both nations and they responded positively to the idea.
The government hopes that offshore processing will deter
asylum-seekers from paying people-smugglers to bring them to Australia,
knowing they could spend years waiting on a Pacific island before moving
back to the country. Parliament will later Tuesday debate amended laws
aimed at reinstating the offshore processing -- a practice abandoned by
the Labor party when it won power in 2007.
It follows an independent report by former defence force chief Angus
Houston released on Monday which recommended reopening the shuttered
camps used under the so-called “Pacific Solution” of former conservative
leader John Howard.
Under the controversial scheme, boatpeople were processed on PNG's
Manus Island or tiny Nauru in Australian-funded detention centres but
many languished on these remote outposts for years. Tony Abbott, who
leads the conservative opposition which has long supported reopening
Nauru as an offshore processing centre, welcomed Gillard's “last-minute
conversion to common sense”, but said it came too late.
“I think this is a good move from the government, it could have come
at any time in the last four years, it should have come much, much
earlier than it has,” he told reporters.
“While the prime minister's stubbornness has been preventing real
solutions from being put in place we've had 22,000 boatpeople, we've had
almost 400 boats and we've had terrible cost, terrible trauma, terrible
tragedy.” The number of boatpeople coming to Australia this year has
reached more than 7,500, an all-time high, and the government
acknowledges that not all boats successfully complete the journey, with
hundreds drowning en route since 2001.
More than 600 Australia-bound asylum-seekers are thought to have
perished at sea since October 2009 and Home Affairs Minister Jason Clare
said Tuesday that another 67 asylum seekers were likely to have died
more recently.
Customs are investigating reports that a boat left Indonesia, a main
transit hub for boatpeople fleeing Afghanistan, Iraq, Iran and Sri
Lanka, in late June but has not been heard from since.
“We're checking with Indonesian officials as well but unfortunately
at the moment there's no evidence that those people have arrived in
Australia,” Clare said. “So 67 people for whom we hold very grave fears
at the moment.” AFP
|