What are you going to do now Mr Morrison??

The High Court has issued an interim injunction preventing the transfer to Sri Lanka of 153 asylum seekers who are missing on a boat bound for Australia.

 

The injunction, granted late on Monday in Sydney, applies at least until a hearing resumes on Tuesday afternoon at 2.15pm.

 

The asylum seekers are represented by Ron Merkel, QC, who argued to Justice Susan Crennan that the transfer was illegal because the asylum seekers had been deprived the ability to have their claims properly assessed.

 

But it is not clear whether the transfer has already taken place because Immigration Minister Scott Morrison has refused to comment and his lawyers told the court they had not received instructions.

 

Sources said lawyers were representing the asylum seekers through their families and they have not been in touch with them since contact was lost more than a week ago.



Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/federal-politics/political-news/high-court-grants-injunction-over-asylum-seeke...

 

All you have to do to stop this kind of thing is to communicate. It can't be that hard surely?

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Re: What are you going to do now Mr Morrison??

of course monman12 what would Dr Binoy Kampark know, not being in the employ of murdoch, Dr Binoy Kampmark was a Commonwealth Scholar at Selwyn College, Cambridge.  He lectures at RMIT University, Melbourne. Of course only the likes of bolt and jones should be listened to - those 2 well known highly intelligent eminent academics.Woman LOL

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http://www.independentaustralia.net/politics/politics-display/scott-morrison--child-kidnapper,6651

 

Scott Morrison — child kidnapper

 

Immigration Minister Scott Morrison has been secretly kidnapping children andsending them to where they are certain to be arrested by a regime famed for its torture, extrajudicial killings and genocidal tendencies.

 

How many children he has kidnapped and sent there is not known.

 

He has boasted that by doing this and keeping the details from us he has "stopped the boats".

 

But two boats have come in the last month.

 

One from India, whose child passengers he has kidnapped also and proposes to send, not back to India. but to the same semi-genocidal regime.

 

The other came from Sri Lanka and its 41 people – 37 Sinhalese and four Tamils – have been sent back there and arrested on their return. Their crime is having left there, and some, we are told – ‘the ringleaders’ – will serve two years in a prison as ill-reputed as Abu Ghraib.

 

Implausibly, Scott Morrison thinks that doing these things has been in our national interest.

 

He calls it "taking the tough decisions" — that kidnapping and traumatising children who may then be killed by their eventual captors "sends a message" to the "people smugglers" who are, he proclaims, much worse people than himself — though they try to bring children to a good place where they might prosper, while he sends them to a bad place, where they might be orphaned, ostracised, impoverished, or killed.

 

‘Orwellian’ barely covers what S&M has been up to, and ‘Kafkaesque’ also seems, as an adjective, insufficient.

 

He has been kidnapping children and women – including pregnant women – and sending them into harm’s way and, in Parliament, boasting that his method is working and assuring the national good.

 

 

 

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"The International Organisation for Migration has backed the Australian Immigration Minister’s view that some of the Sri Lankan's arriving in Australia by boat are economic migrants, not refugees."

 

A link including the name of the spolesperson for this organisation and the actual words used in the statement, would be helpful in establishing its veracity.

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Not sure where you are getting your info from monmna but court transcripts are showing that those 41 refugees were headed to NZ.

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I should also point out that it is becoming clear that not all of the 41 refugees were interviewed as originally stated by the government. So I am not sure how they were assessed to be Tamil or not.

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@the_great_she_elephant wrote:

"The International Organisation for Migration has backed the Australian Immigration Minister’s view that some of the Sri Lankan's arriving in Australia by boat are economic migrants, not refugees."

 

A link including the name of the spolesperson for this organisation and the actual words used in the statement, would be helpful in establishing its veracity.


maybe monman12 could provide anything about this organisation mentioning morisson at all - there own site makes no such mention of current events - maybe I have the wrong group - they have a z in the word organisation.

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"A link including the name of the spolesperson for this organisation and the actual words used in the statement, would be helpful in establishing its veracity."

It is very easy to research TGSE!

 

Australia Network News.

 

Sri Lankans heading to Australia 'economic migrants', not refugees: IOM

Updated Wed 7 Nov 2012, 7:49am AEDT

Sri Lankan asylum seeker boat

The International Organisation for Migration has backed the Australian Immigration Minister’s view that some of the Sri Lankan's arriving in Australia by boat are economic migrants, not refugees.

The number of Sri Lankan's trying to reach Australia by boat has increased by 25-fold over the past 12 months, from 211 irregular maritime arrivals in 2011, to more than 5,300 already this year.

The Chief of mission for the International Organisation for Migration (IOM) in Sri Lanka, Richard Danziger, told Radio Australia coastal security has "really been loosened up" by the Sri Lankan government.

"During the war and the months after it there were a lot of restrictions on fishing and so forth and that is no longer the case so boats can leave more easily," he said.

Economic factors

Mr Danziger says one of the factors driving Sri Lankan's to board boats to Australia is their economic situation.

The IOM is working with the Australian Government helping repatriate the Sri Lankan's who chose to return home rather than wait for years in detention centres in Australia or on Nauru.

He says many of those who have chosen to return to Sri Lanka voluntarily originally left their homeland in search of work.

"That is often what we hear, people tell us they were just seeking better lives," he said.

Last week, Australia's immigration minister Chris Bowen sent 26 men back to Sri Lanka who had arrived by boat, suggesting they were economic refugees.

"We have, of course, developed robust procedures for dealing with genuine claims for asylum, but we will not have people who do not have genuine claims to make be going through our system," Mr Bowen said.

Tough times

The men who have chosen to go home often return to tough financial times, often with large debts to people smugglers who helped them get to Australia.

 Mr Danziger says some are facing pressure from their own families to stay in Australia or Nauru and persist with their claims.

"I certainly know of one particular case of a guy who came back from Christmas Island and his family were very annoyed, saying he had given up, he wasn't thinking of them, that he was weak etc etc and he was facing a hard time on his way back so I hink that must be the case for others," he said.

The Australian Government is offering assistance packages worth several thousand dollars to those who return voluntarily and are not deemed to be members of people smuggling crews.

"What we did 10 days ago was get some of the returnees on a Skype call with some of the Sri Lankan's on Nauru so they could tell their friends exactly what awaits them in Sri Lanka and that what they have been told in terms of the package is true," he said

Warnings unheeded

The IOM is also working with Australia's Department of Immigration to warn people who do try to come to Australia by boat that they face being detained for a length period, without work rights.

Officials have been speaking with fishermen and religious leaders in some of the poorest costal communities trying to get the message out.

"It is very difficult to get that kind of message across," he said.

"People generally believe what they want to believe".

Richard Danziger says the upcoming monsoon season may deter some Sri Lankan from trying to reach Australia by boat but that it will be hard to convince those who are in search of a better life to stay put.

"Sri Lanka first of all is a country of migrants.One quarter of the country is abroad legally wether it is in the Middle East, Europe or Australia," he said.

"The idea of migrating for work is not limited to a small number of people and the legal opportunities for working abroad are not enough to satisfy everybody so people resort to illegal means.

"The monsoon season ...will certainly make it more difficult for people to leave and maybe that will be a window of opportunity for us to get the information out about it not being worth investing in a very risky journey".

nɥºɾ

 

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7th of november 2012 .Woman LOLWoman LOL

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"maybe monman12 could provide anything about this organisation mentioning morisson at all - there own site makes no such mention of current events - maybe I have the wrong group - they have a z in the word organisation."

 

Perhaps I better repeat the comments/excerpts, because i think you have the wrong period:

 

"The International Organisation for Migration has backed the Australian Immigration Minister’s view that some of the Sri Lankan's arriving in Australia by boat are economic migrants, not refugees."

"Last week, Australia's immigration minister Chris Bowen sent 26 men back to Sri Lanka who had arrived by boat, suggesting they were economic refugees."

Note the name :  Chris Bowen (Circus in town)

 

Hint:  Chris Bowen (Circus in town)

 

nɥºɾ

 

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Some may recall the last Commonwealth Heads Of Government Meeting that was held in Sri Lanka last year and was boycotted by many nations, including Canada. This is interesting as Tony Abbott seems to have developed a special friendship with Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper who thought that Sri Lanka’s recent alleged atrocities that include genocide, torture and rape were serious enough to boycott the event.

 

Other world leaders such as UK PM David Cameron called for a United Nations investigation into the allegations of torture and genocide.

 

By contrast Tony Abbott when asked about the torture of civilians by the government military forces had this to say as he organised for a gift on behalf of Australia of military boats worth $2 Million.

 

 “We accept that sometimes in difficult circumstances, difficult things happen”

 

Since 2012, more than 1,000 Sri Lankan asylum seekers have been returned by the Australian government. A Guardian and Human Rights Law Centre investigation revealed that Australian authorities in Colombo ignored claims that a returned asylum seeker had been tortured in Sri Lankan prison, sparking criticism that Australia employs a strategy of “wilful blindness” on the plight of those returned.

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