The Labor party has just rejected a move to close Nauru and Manus Island as places for processing asylum claims. If the move had succeeded, it would have been a welcome retreat from the intentional cruelty of the present system. It is profoundly regrettable that the Labor party has decided to stay with a flawed system which disfigures this country.
Australia’s treatment of boat people needs a radical rethink. It is shameful that we are now trying to treat asylum seekers so harshly that they will be deterred from seeking our help at all. It is shameful that this deliberate mistreatment of asylum seekers has been “justified” by describing them falsely as “illegal”, when in fact they commit no offence by coming here and asking for protection. It is shameful that the deliberate Coalition lies about asylum seekers have not been roundly condemned by the Labor party.
There are better ways of responding to asylum seekers. If I could redesign the system, I would choose between two possible models.
The Regional and Tasmanian solutions
Boat-arrivals would be detained initially, but for a maximum of one month, to allow preliminary health and security checks. That detention would be subject to extension, but only if a court was persuaded that a particular individual should be detained longer.
After that period of initial detention, boat arrivals would be released into the community on an interim visa with a number of conditions that would apply until the person’s refugee status was decided:
• they would be required to report regularly to a Centrelink office or a post office, to make sure they remained available for the balance of the process;
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In the hysteria about boat arrivals it's often forgotten that arrivals by boats never got to the level of our refugee quota so we didn't end up taking more refugees, those getting on a boat simply displaced those whom we otherwise have taken from camps in East
Africa etc. In a world where education and skills are increasingly important I think there's something to be said for in effect requiring somebody to come up with $10,000 in a poor country as the price of getting to Australia as a refugee. By definition such a person will be middle class, with some level of education, English skills and quite a bit of acumen. Such people are probably going to do better in Australia than those who by no fault of their own don't have any those things and have just been picked at random from a refugee camp.
By accident shifting our refugee program to boat people might actually have come up something that replicated our very successful skilled migration program and still allowed us to take more refugees than most other countries.
Memo to JB and co... IT'S OVER. There have been no illegal boat arrivals for six months. The six thousand or so in detention and being cleared and processes are being sped up to deal with those in the community.
At the current rate, we will be back to 2007 in under two years with no arrivals and only a handful of people in detention.
Move on.
This problem is fixed and will remain so, at least until we elect another Labor Government and then they go and f*** it all up again.
Hey Sherro
fact: I just spoke to 2 people last week (one is my sister) who work in Nauru - boats have not been stopped. Things are not speeding up with processing. The problem is far from fixed.
Oh my god. This comment makes me want to vomit. How nice it must be to feel so entitled to peace and freedom.