Bangkok Post

‘No apology’ from Rudd on asylum stance

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SYDNEY: Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd said yesterday he made ‘‘absolutely no apology’’ for his hardline new policy of sending asylum-seekers to Papua New Guinea as hundreds of protesters marched against his stance in Sydney.

Under the directive, those who pay people-smugglers to arrive on unauthoris­ed boats will be sent to the poor South Pacific nation for processing and be resettled there — even if judged to be genuine refugees.

‘‘On the question of asylum-seekers . . . we’ve had to adjust our policy over time and I make absolutely no apology whatsoever for our current policy settings, because the world around us has changed,’’ Mr Rudd told Network Ten.

Mr Rudd, who was last month reinstalle­d as prime minister by his Labor colleagues to help turn around dire opinion polls in an election year, had previously softened some of the former con- servative government’s policies. But after being reappointe­d leader, he quickly announced a radically reshaped immigratio­n plan under which boatpeople could be resettled in PNG, sent home or to a third country — but not to Australia.

The plan has worried the United Nations refugee agency UNHCR (United Nations High Commission­er for Refugees), which said on Friday that conditions at Papua New Guinea’s Manus Island facility currently failed adequately to protect refugees.

‘‘UNHCR is troubled by the current absence of adequate protection standards and safeguards for asylum-seekers and refugees in Papua New Guinea,’’ it said in its first assessment of the policy.

Hundreds took to the streets in Sydney to protest against the policy yesterday, carrying placards with messages such as ‘‘Let them land, let them stay’’, and at one point blocking a major intersecti­on.

‘‘Kevin Rudd has gone too far,’’ said Ian Rintoul from the Refugee Action Coalition. ‘‘And he has misjudged the sentiment of the Australian community.’’

Australia resumed sending asylumseek­ers to Manus Island and the Pacific state of Nauru in 2012 to try to deter record numbers arriving by boat, hundreds of whom drowned en route.

Mr Rudd has said the new policy will take some time to deter asylum-seekers. Since he announced the change just over a week ago, officials have intercepte­d 15 boats carrying about 1,250 people.

‘‘It is the implementa­tion of that policy direction over time, resolutely, which will yield results,’’ he told Network Ten’s Bolt Report television programme.

Asylum-seekers are a sensitive issue in Australia, and one set to feature prominentl­y in the election due this year.

A Galaxy poll of more than 1,000 voters published in The Sunday Telegraph found that not only had Labor’s vote improved under Mr Rudd, he was also rated as better at handling the asylum-seeker issue.

Mr Rudd outscored opposition leader Tony Abbott 40% to 38% on the asylumseek­er issue in a poll taken after the PNG policy had been announced and publicised widely by the government.

The opposition leader said he was not worried about the poll — which put Mr Rudd’s and Mr Abbott’s parties at 50:50 — and said the PNG plan was yet to go into action as no new asylum-seekers had been sent to Manus.

‘‘In any contest of wills between Mr Rudd and the people-smugglers, the people-smugglers think they will win,’’ Mr Abbott told reporters.

But Mr Rudd said while peoplesmug­glers would test the government’s resolve, ‘‘we are not for turning’’.

‘‘Our policy is very clear . . . you will not be settled in Australia,’’ he said.

 ?? AFP ?? Pro-refugee supporters march through central Sydney yesterday after Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd said he made ‘‘absolutely no apology’’ for his new asylum-seekers policy.
AFP Pro-refugee supporters march through central Sydney yesterday after Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd said he made ‘‘absolutely no apology’’ for his new asylum-seekers policy.

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