on 02-06-2013 05:35 PM
The latest arrival of two vessels carrying 157 people takes the total number of illegal boats that have arrived on Labor’s watch past 700.
Over 42,000 people have arrived on 701 boats since the Rudd-Gillard Government dismantled the Howard Government’s border protection regime.
Labor’s decision to dismantle the Howard Government’s policies has put our country’s security at risk.
It has cost hundreds of lives lost at sea and resulted in thousands of people entering our communities without rigorous security checks.
Every illegal boat arrival cost Australians $12.8 million (on average) – and that’s money which could otherwise go to fund hospitals, roads and help repay debt.
It has seen border protection cost blowouts of more than $10 billion for a system that does not work – that’s money which could otherwise fund hospitals, roads and help repay debt.
Labor’s mismanagement has also included the detention of a convicted jihadist terrorist in low security family accommodation at Inverbrackie in South Australia.
This jihadist was a member of the terrorist organisation Egyptian Islamic Jihad, which merged with al Qaeda in 2001, many years before his arrival by boat.
With an average of 100 people now arriving every day, Australia cannot afford three more years of Labor failure.
on 09-06-2013 11:45 AM
Hello....it is politcal, a political decision which has ended in tragedy perpetrated by Labor.
people seeking asylum by boat is perpetrated by Labor ?
The vast majority of these people are not refugees, they are economic lifestyle shoppers, ergo, this loss of border control is Labors Fault.
But world peace sounds good:^O
on 09-06-2013 11:47 AM
can you imagine the size of the war that would be needed............to achieve world piece
on 09-06-2013 11:48 AM
World peace and an end to poverty may solve the need
Wow you heard it here first folks
do a bit more research
on 09-06-2013 11:52 AM
12 April 2013, 2.22pm EST
All the King’s drones won’t stop the boats
AUTHORMelissa Phillips
Doctoral Candidate at University of Melbourne
Melissa Phillips has received funding from the Australian Research Council.
After relying on immigration policies taken from the copy book of John Howard, the Liberal party has turned to defence technology for its latest policy innovation involving drones detecting boats carrying asylum-seekers in Australian waters.
on 09-06-2013 11:55 AM
can you imagine the size of the war that would be needed............to achieve world piece
Mr Grizz , I don't expect that it will ever happen
on 09-06-2013 12:01 PM
drone's (although most have too short a range to patrol effectively) could find boats. they couldn't deliver the navy though, as it simply hasn't the capability. no government is going to deploy the entire navy to the emigration zone either .. there simply arent enough suitable craft or the budget to do so. 'turning back' is a discredited policy. The indonesian govt and the australian navy said its a furphy. julie "we have an understanding with indonesia'' has demonstrated that the policy is a fraud.
on 09-06-2013 12:15 PM
policy is a fraud.
yes it has
I whole article raises some valid points imo for that reason I am going to add it .Some poster such as Meep (as she posted previously here ) don't click on links.
All the King’s drones won’t stop the boats
Melissa Phillips
After relying on immigration policies taken from the copy book of John Howard, the Liberal party has turned to defence technology for its latest policy innovation involving drones detecting boats carrying asylum-seekers in Australian waters.
One wonders just how far the Leader of the federal opposition, Tony Abbott, will go to capitalise on perceived fears about “boat people”. Such fears have long existed in the Australian psyche from hysteria about an invasion by the “Yellow Peril” to Australia’s north and panic at the end of the White Australia policy. Concerns about border security have reached new heights with the arrival of a boat in Geraldton, West Australia.
To his mantra of “turn back the boats” Abbott has now added calls to have naval commanders intercept boats and make asylum determinations at sea. He already supports a Labor plan to excise the mainland from Australia’s migration zone (which is another Howard-era policy proposal), suggests that police and neighbours should be notified of asylum-seekers living in communities and, if re-elected, has long stated he would re-introduce Temporary Protection Visas. With such a raft of policy proposals on the table one wonders when the limits of political posturing on immigration will be reached, if at all.
Absent from current debates about asylum-seekers and border security, which reached fever pitch last year during the height of boat arrivals and asylum-seeker deaths, is an acknowledgement that many other industrialised countries are facing similar issues. Take asylum-seeker arrivals. The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) reported an 8% increase in asylum applications in 44 industrialised countries between 2011 and 2012. Last year Australia experienced a 37% increase in asylum-seeker arrivals, but the UN refugee agency made it very clear that “by comparison, asylum levels in Australia continue to remain below those recorded by many other industrialised and non-industrialised countries”.
Asylum-seeker numbers are increasing worldwide due to a sharp increase in conflict in countries such as Syria where the death toll is approaching 70,000. More people are fleeing Afghanistan, a country ranked 175 on the Human Development Index, due to fears over the future of the country after foreign troops withdraw in 2014. These two countries are the top two source countries for asylum-seekers world-wide. In 2011-12, most asylum-seekers arriving by boat to Australia originated from Afghanistan. The recent group of boat arrivals in Geraldton began their journey in Sri Lanka. In its 2013 World Report, Human Rights Watch noted there has been no inquiry into war crimes in Sri Lanka during 2008-9 when 40,000 civilians were killed. Human Rights Watch has also raised concerns about the torture of Tamil separatists.
People fleeing violence and persecution in Syria, Sri Lanka and Afghanistan, are quite obviously leaving because of insecurity in their countries. Rhetoric from politicians about deterrents and “stopping the boats” is targeted at the Australian voting public and not prospective asylum-seekers. We know that in the asylum policy, deterrents simply do not work. We also know thatdeterrent messages rarely reach asylum-seekers. And with most asylum-seekers originating from repressive regimes, even if they did receive these messages they would likely ignore them. Faced with the potential of torture, persecution or death in their own country and finding no safety in neighbouring countries, displaced people are on the move and seeking asylum in industrialised countries including Australia. The sooner we come to terms with the nature of global asylum flows and patterns, the sooner we will be able to put in place responses that respect national sovereignty and people’s rights to seek asylum.
The Houston Panel report acknowledged many of these global realities but still clung to outdated notions that asylum-seekers can be “pushed” and “pulled” through Australian policy settings. It did well to recommend an urgent need for regional approaches to migration policy and commitment to improving processes so that people can find protection in their own countries and neighbouring or transit countries.
Suggestions by Opposition Immigration Spokesperson Scott Morrison that the West Australian coastline is “open game”for asylum-seekers might serve to convince Australian voters about his immigration credentials against a new Immigration Minister, but will do nothing to stop boats arriving and people claiming asylum in Australia.
Take a deep breath as we’re in for a long haul of political posturing with very few plausible solutions.
http://theconversation.com/all-the-kings-drones-wont-stop-the-boats-13447
on 09-06-2013 01:20 PM
I agree Deb.
World peace and an end to poverty may solve the need ...failing that , just letting as many who want to come come may solve the issue of people trying to make the journey in dangerous boats ...I doubt that solution would please the OP though.
So instead of standing and shouting at those who can do who are doing I would like to ask the shouters what can be done ?
Iza, do you understand how our Humanitarian Program works? Who determines and how the number of places?
on 09-06-2013 01:30 PM
another endless scroller. Didn't I read somewhere that this behaviour is unacceptable?
on 09-06-2013 01:35 PM
Meep, no , I don't fully understand.I am trying to though...it does look to me as though that is an area which may need addressing .I have just been reading this .
http://www.watoday.com.au/comment/asylum-seekers-the-story-that-doesnt-get-told-20130412-2hpcm.html
Asylum seekers: the story that doesn't get told
DateApril 12, 2013
Pamela Mirghani
WA today.com.au producer
I turned the radio off yesterday. I couldn't bear to hear any more vitriol directed at the Geraldton asylum seekers. "Why do they bring their children with them?" one woman asked. "Is it because they want us to feel sorry for them?"
This woman assumed (based on what, I have no idea) that the asylum seekers are scheming and manipulative, with no real regard or love for their children.
Saying asylum seekers who arrive by boat should wait and apply offshore is like telling someone to sit in a burning house and "wait their turn" until a firefighter comes to save them.
Most Australians have no concept of how desperate the asylum seekers' situation is – after all it's not likely they have ever needed to think about hiring people smugglers or seeking asylum themselves.
As it happens, I have.
Read more: http://www.watoday.com.au/comment/asylum-seekers-the-story-that-doesnt-get-told-20130412-2hpcm.html#...