The Asian Age

Oz govt loses Bill blocking sick asylum seekers

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This Bill is acceptable in absolutely no form. It only weakens our borders, it does not strengthen them”

— Scott Morrison, Prime Minister

◗ The Bill will allow doctors instead of bureaucrat­s to decide which asylum seekers in the camps can fly to Australia for medical treatment.

Canberra, Feb. 12: Australia’s ruling party suffered a rare defeat in Parliament on Tuesday after the Opposition joined minor parties and independen­t lawmakers in passing a Bill that would give sick asylum seekers easier access to mainland hospitals.

Prime Minister Scott Morrison’s conservati­ve government argues that the Bill, passed 75 to 74 by the House of Representa­tives, will undermine Australia’s tough refugee policy.

The policy banishes asylum seekers who attempt to reach Australia by boat to camps on the Pacific island nations of Papua New Guinea and Nauru.

The Bill would allow doctors instead of bureaucrat­s to decide which asylum

seekers in the camps can fly to Australia for medical treatment.

It is likely to be made law by the Senate as early as Wednesday. “This Bill is acceptable in absolutely no form. It only weakens our borders, it does not strengthen them,” Mr Morrison said Tuesday.

Australian government­s rarely lose votes in the House of Representa­tives, where parties need a

majority to form an administra­tion. But the ruling coalition lost its single- seat majority when former Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull quit politics after he was deposed by his party colleagues in August. Another lawmaker has since quit the government as part of the bitter fallout over the leadership change. But Mr Morrison on Tuesday ruled out calling a snap election on the refugee issue, saying Australian­s will go to the polls in May. Refugee advocates applauded from Parliament’s public gallery when lawmakers endorsed what they regard as a more humanitari­an approach toward asylum seekers.

The Senate passed similar amendments on medical evacuation­s despite ruling party objections on the last day Parliament sat last year.

Australian security agencies warned in December that if those amendments became law, asylum seekers from Asia, Africa and the Middle East would likely head to Australia again in rickety fishing boats from Southeast Asian ports.

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