Despite the drama surrounding the Christmas Island tragedy, despite the hysteria from extremists on the Right and Left desperate to exploit it — and despite the government’s peculiar reaction to it — the basic policy problem around asylum seekers remains the same.
Australia still handles a trivial number of asylum seekers compared to many countries, despite the conflict-induced surge in refugees from the Middle East and conflicts such as the Tamil insurgency. There’s no policy problem around our refugee intake, except that for a country of our size and wealth it should be at the very least a little higher. There is a policy problem around the apparent ease with which people can enter Australia on tourist or student visas with the intention of staying here permanently, but that seems to attract little attention even from bigots.
The key policy problem is discouraging asylum seekers from attempting to reach Australia via dangerous boat trips.
No one else has found a solution to this in periods when refugees numbers are on the rise, as they have been in recent years. Hundreds — hundreds — of refugees and would-be immigrants drown trying to reach southern European countries like Spain and Greece every year. Nor is it merely about asylum seekers trying to reach wealthy western countries. Tens of thousands of Somali refugees try to cross the Gulf of Aden every year to Yemen, with many drowning in the attempt. Tamil refugees fleeing from Sri Lanka perish attempting to reach Tamil Nadu, despite a massive effort by the Indian Navy to deter them.
This is despite the fact that India isn’t even a signatory to the UN Refugee Convention. Advocates of Australia abandoning its UN refugee obligations might take note.
Claims by journalists and activists that somehow every inch of thousands of square nautical miles of ocean can be kept under surveillance in all conditions defy credibility.
The Opposition’s obsessive reliance on temporary protection visas won’t work either. The evidence is that TPVs encourage the families of asylum seekers to risk boat journeys to join loved ones here, not discourage them. That’s why so many women and children drowned when SIEV X foundered in October 2001.
Labor’s policy of a regional processing centre under the auspices of the UN is at best only a partial solution. In the absence of a system that process and places hundreds of thousands of refugees a year, clearing the vast human “backlog” of refugees and new ones forced from their homelands every year, asylum seekers will continue to risk their lives and property trying to reach southern Europe, and Yemen, and India and Australia.
And no system to do that is going to materialise any time soon, anywhere.
Labor should continue pursuing its regional processing option, even if it began life as a desperate effort to defuse the issue before the election. It’s a perfect example of Julia Gillard’s insistence that her government will take its time to achieve genuine reform.
Instead, the Prime Minister reacted yesterday with Labor’s typical determination to be all things to all people — a trait correctly noted by US diplomats on the asylum seeker issue — and cover its backside as much possible.
It was Rudd’s “tough but humane” phraseology that best exemplified his mixed messages on asylum seekers. It was a half-smart message designed to appeal to asylum seeker supporters and those who wanted to send them packing. It worked — in exactly the opposite way intended, alienating both. It is echoed in Gillard’s insistence on publicly showing compassion for the victims of the tragedy while railing against people smugglers — a faceless, easily demonised villain that, like attacking “drug dealers”, serves to obscure rather than illuminate the problem at hand.
And then there’s the confusion over exactly what her cross-party committee is to do. Initially the Prime Minister said yesterday that she wanted to “invite the Opposition, the Greens and the Independent members of Parliament to work with the government and the relevant agencies for managing the response to this incident.”
To be fair, she’d been at pains to stress this didn’t mean there shouldn’t be a debate about asylum seeker policy. But then “managing the response to this incident” became more receiving information about what happened, to ensure there was no dispute around the facts Children Overboard-style — a “bipartisan reporting mechanism”. But then in virtually the same sentence it morphed into a body that would draw conclusions and work out whether anything different should have been done. By the time her interview on The 7.30 Report rolled around, the mission had retreated again to receiving reports.
The Opposition is right to be chary of this, given the lack of clarity around the purpose of the committee.
And it’s hard to give the government the benefit of the doubt. This is the government of the “citizens’ assembly” on climate change, of the independent-chaired parliamentary committee into the MDB, one that seems permanently looking for political cover on difficult issues.
Despite the pressure to be seen to do something, the Prime Minister should take her own advice and keep on working on the limited policy options she’s got. It’s a problem that is not, for all the emotion and anger and tragedy, going to go away.
The truth that isn’t told often enough is that the policies of receiving countries (like Australia) don’t really affect the decision-making of the majority of refugee claimants who come by boat. This makes sense if you think about it – your primary concern is getting to safety, you’re often reliant on the smuggling networks for information, and your knowledge of Australia is probably limited to the fact that it’s relatively peaceful and rich (which is true), and seems to respect human rights (which is mostly true, but not so much when it comes to refugee claimants, unfortunately).
But another truth that isn’t told enough is that boat arrivals don’t really present a ‘policy problem’ so much as a political problem. As a matter of policy, it ought to be pretty simple: let them in, process them according to our quite sophisticated refugee law regime, and honour our international obligations and respect human rights. Even at the current high rates of arrivals (historically speaking, although not comparative to the rest of the world), we clearly have the bureaucratic and financial capacity to do this. The problem is really only caused when we start to try and deter people through sanctions on unauthorised passengers, on people smugglers, and by restricting family reunion. That’s what makes the refugees desperate, makes the operations clandestine, and ensures that the boats are leaky and the people smugglers wave them off at the shore.
Jewish people smugglers in the 1930’s and 1940’s – helping Jews to flee Nazi hatred – are looked back on as heros.
“People smugglers” might be in it for the money. Some of them. Maybe the majority of them. Some of the WWII ones were too. But at the end of the day, to focus on them detracts us from the real issue: the plight and desparation of the people fleeing war or persecution. Real families. Men women and children.
The recent boat tragedy makes me both sad, and angry. I think my sorrow for the families who have lost loved ones, makes me angry… angry at idiots like Abbott (who seems to have disappeared from public view as of late). His “I will turn the boats back” sounds so criminal right now. And yet so many ordinary Aussies bought into that nonesense. Disaster at sea is the outcome if you “turn the boats back”. People will perish at sea. We are finally seeing ONE boat go down… how many others disappear with all on board and we never hear about it?
Abbott is right to be in hiding right now. He is a cruel and manipulative man. Any human being who wants to “turn the boats back” to win an election is a criminal. I hope he is feeling the heat. I wish the mainsteam media had the courage to call him to task for his attitude towards refugees.
I have some solutions … let them come … let them fill our empty country towns …. let them build businesses … let them do the crappy jobs “we” won’t do …. let them contribute to the evolution of our Australian. Invest in educating the population that coloured skins, different clothes and other lanaguages aren’t things to be feared rather something to embrace at it adds to the wonder that is our fabulous amazing country not only in cusine but in our very culture. We know this to be true because that is what other waves of immigration have done.
If Australia took the recommended number of refugees, annually, that the UN recommends for a country or our wealth, we would be taking 0.1% of our population: 21,000 a year. We currently take 13,000. The boat people come from Indonesia – it is the last stop over before getting into those boats.
Currently in Indonesia there are some few thousand people waiting as refugees to be placed. It takes about 20 years for a refugee in Indonesia to get placed somewhere. And while they are refugees there: their kids can not go to school and they can not work for money. Hence the attractiveness – necessity – of the boat trip.
Australia only took 50 from that UN refugee list in Indonesia last year. We take 6000 from UN lists from all over the world each year, but only 50 from there. (We take the other 7000 from our own list: people who directly ask us to be refugees).
If we upped how many we take to the UN recommended figure, (21,000 a year), we could clear the entire backlog from indonesia in less that one year!! That would mean no one there waiting to be placed would risk a boat trip because they know they would be placed here within a year. And remember: the end result of the boat trip is to get off the UN list and get onto the Australian list – and be placed at Christmas island until processed – and that takes about a year or more. So… no need for the boat trip: they will get placed in the same time frame by staying in Indonesia under this suggestion!
Finally, without getting into a debate about the pros and cons of large numbers of people coming to Australia (we allow nearly 200,000 a year most years… nearly all as immigrants. 13,000 as refugees, but the rest as immigrants), if people are worried about the total number and the sustainability of that (water, services, etc) then the answer is simple: still increase the refugees to 21,000 a year and drop back immigrants by the same (or higher) figure.
Other things should be done at the same time of course: work with the UN and countries like Pakistan to see if they would have a proper UN run refugee processing camp (to stop so many from the dangerous journey through malysia to indonesia to Australia), and work on promoting peace and stability in nations in our region and beyond… but there are things we can do to help prevent the tragic loss of life at sea that is occuring to desparate families.
Refugees in detention at the height of the Pacific Solution: 3600
Refugees in detention at the end of the Pacific Solution: 600
Refugees in IDCs (ie. behind razor wire) now: 3924
Total refugees in immigration detention now: 5626
How many hundred more deaths, how many thousands more detained will it take for the ALP and Greens to admit that the current policy is WORSE than the Pacific Solution?