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Down Under | ||
Aussie PM backs deportation of asylum seekers | ||
2012-08-14 | ||
CANBERRA: Australia's prime minister announced a sharp reversal in her government's policy on asylum seekers yesterday, saying it will introduce legislation allowing their deportation to the poor Pacific nations of Papua New Guinea and Nauru to face lengthy stays in detention camps. Prime Minister Julia Gillard's center-left Labor Party had long argued against the concept of Australian-funded detention camps on the island nations as an expensive waste of money that would fail to deter new arrivals. But she said her government has accepted the recommendation of an expert panel yesterday to reopen camps established a decade ago by a conservative administration, and that legislation to enable the deportation of asylum seekers will be introduced to Parliament when it resumes today after a six-week break.
“When our nation looks at what is happening at sea as people attempt dangerous journeys to Australia, too many lives have been lost and I'm not going to play politics or look at political scoreboards when too many lives have been lost,” Gillard told reporters after her Cabinet gave its support in principle for all the recommendations in the expert panel's report. The report aims to curb boat arrivals by removing any advantages that asylum seekers might gain in their refugee claims by reaching Australia. It was drawn up by a panel headed by former Australian Defense Force Chief Angus Houston and combines policy proposals by the major political parties, who have been bitterly divided on the issue. Human rights group Amnesty International described the report's recommendations as a major setback for Australian refugee policy.
More than 7,000 asylum seekers — many from war-torn countries including Afghanistan, Iraq and Sri Lanka — have reached the Australian Indian Ocean territory of Christmas Island in more than 100 boats so far this year. | ||
Posted by:Steve White |
#6 "Ecuador supports rapists" |
Posted by: Frank G 2012-08-14 21:06 |
#5 Talking about asylum: Assange granted asylum: report ECUADOR has granted political asylum to WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange, according to a newspaper report. President Rafael Correa granted asylum on humanitarian grounds, The Guardian reported on its website, citing "officials within Ecuador's government". "We see Assange's request as a humanitarian issue," an unnamed official told the daily. "It is clear that when Julian entered the embassy there was already some sort of deal," the official said. |
Posted by: tipper 2012-08-14 17:24 |
#4 Australia is a victim of it's "caring and humanitarian" BS. They extended the Refugee convention (along with Canada) to include a resettlement component. What that means is that any "asylum seeker" can claim resettlement in Australia once they reach any part of it. The scheme is extremely expensive and it is reckoned the each "refugee" cost the country many millions EACH. Its been worked out that it would be cheaper to offer each seeker a million bucks, fingerprint and DNA them and give them the option of going back from whence they came. It's basically bringing the country to its knees, proof positive that each good deed will be severely punished. Jump in asylum seekers could cause budget blowout |
Posted by: tipper 2012-08-14 17:11 |
#3 Because learning to speak Australian is much easier than Japanese ? |
Posted by: Besoeker 2012-08-14 03:11 |
#2 She's just lying AGAIN. |
Posted by: Bright Pebbles 2012-08-14 02:55 |
#1 Hear, hear. |
Posted by: g(r)omgoru 2012-08-14 01:42 |