The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, António Guterres, said recently that “something strange happens” in the minds of Australians when it comes to asylum seekers who arrive by boat without a visa.
Australia’s Refugee Problem
Editorial Board / New York Times | 4 July 2014
Australia
is pursuing draconian measures to deter people without visas from
entering the country by boat. In doing so, it is failing in its
obligation under international accords to protect refugees fleeing
persecution.
Last
fall, Prime Minister Tony Abbott launched Operation Sovereign Borders, a
campaign involving the military to divert boats full of asylum seekers
to Indonesia before they can reach Australian shores. Immigration
Minister Scott Morrison now says that no boat has arrived in Australia
in the last six months, and vows to take “every step necessary to ensure
that people who arrive illegally by boat are not rewarded with
permanent visas.”
Mr. Morrison has also moved to impose a freeze on granting permanent protection visas to about 1,400 people already in the country and already judged to be legitimate refugees fleeing persecution. In addition, he introduced a bill last month to lower the threshold for deporting asylum seekers. For instance, people will have to prove that they have more than a 50 percent chance of being harmed if they return to their home country. Current rules stipulate that asylum seekers cannot be returned if there is a “real chance” of harm.
Australian
politics is fraught with debate on this subject. Before the hotly
contested federal election last September, then-Prime Minister Kevin
Rudd pledged that no one who arrived by boat without a visa would ever
be granted permission to settle in Australia, and adopted a tough policy
of sending asylum seekers to a refugee-processing center in nearby
Papua New Guinea; those found to be genuine refugees would be resettled
there. But as a signatory to the United Nations Convention on Refugees,
Australia is legally obligated to grant anyone fleeing persecution and
seeking asylum the right to enter the country.
The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, António Guterres, said
recently that “something strange happens” in the minds of Australians
when it comes to asylum seekers who arrive by boat without a visa.
Horrible
instances of hundreds of people dying in unseaworthy boats may play a
role in this thinking. So may xenophobia. Curiously, though, the
hostility to people who try to arrive by boat does not seem to extend to
asylum seekers in general. Australia is fairly generous about offering
protection to refugees, as long as they apply for protection from
overseas, obtain a visa, then enter Australia.
In
2012, there were 29,610 such applications and 8,367 were recognized as
refugees. Between 2001 and 2008, when Australia imposed mandatory
detention of visa-less asylum seekers at offshore processing centers, 70
percent of the 1,637 asylum seekers were recognized as refugees. But
there is something about the boat people that has provided politicians
with an exploitable issue that does Australia’s otherwise commendable
record on refugees no good.
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