Khaleej Times

Refugees entering Australia by boats face lifetime ban

- AFP

sydney — Australia moved on Sunday to bar any refugee or asylumseek­er who arrives in the country illegally by boat from ever being able to apply for a visa, even as tourists or for business.

The lifetime ban will be put to parliament when it next sits, with Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull saying it was necessary to send an “absolutely, unflinchin­g, unequivoca­l message” that boatpeople will never be allowed in Australia.

“This is a battle of will between the Australian people, represente­d by its government, and the criminal gangs of people-smugglers,” he said.

“You should not underestim­ate the scale of the threat. These people-smugglers are the worst criminals imaginable. They have a multibilli­on-dollar business.

“We have to be very determined to say no to their criminal plans.”

Amendments to the migration act would be backdated to mid2013, when former Labor prime minister Kevin Rudd declared: “As of today, asylum-seekers who come here by boat without a visa will never be settled in Australia.”

Canberra currently sends all boatpeople to offshore processing camps on the Pacific islands of Nauru and Papua New Guinea’s Manus. They are already blocked

this is a battle of will between the australian people, represente­d by its government, and the criminal gangs of peoplesmug­glers

Malcolm Turnbull Australian Prime Minister

from being resettled in Australia even if found to be genuine refugees. They can either return home, make a life on Manus or Nauru, or go to a third country.

The new legislatio­n would affect those sent to Nauru and Manus from July 19, 2013, including those who have returned home, and anyone who arrives in the future.

But children will be exempt and the immigratio­n minister would have the power to make exceptions.

The Nauru facility holds just over 400 men, women and children.

Some 800 men are detained on Manus, which Australia in August agreed to close after a Papua New Guinea court ruling that holding people there was unconstitu­tional and illegal.

Rights group have alleged there is widespread abuse and self-harm in the camps. Turnbull said the move would reinforce to refugee advocates still hoping Australia will accept some of those on Nauru or Manus that it will never happen.

“We have one of the most generous humanitari­an programmes in the world,” he said.

“But the only reason we can do it, the only reason it has the public acceptance that it does, is because we are in command of our borders.”

Australia has boosted its annual humanitari­an refugee intake in recent years from 13,750 to 18,750, and has also agreed to take 12,000 displaced in Syria and Iraq.

Refugee advocates said the plan was unacceptab­le, with Save the Children fearing it will further exacerbate the mental anguish of those held in the Pacific camps.

“We have grave concerns that this kind of announceme­nt will push people over the edge,” said the organisati­on’s director of policy and public advocacy in Australia Mat Tinkler. —

 ?? AFP file ?? Australia-bound asylum-seekers are seen off western Sumatra, after being intercepte­d by Indonesian authoritie­s. —
AFP file Australia-bound asylum-seekers are seen off western Sumatra, after being intercepte­d by Indonesian authoritie­s. —

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