Are those seeking resettlement different to refugees that come by boat? I'd have thought not given so many of them are livinbg in
refugee camps.
Yes they are different. The people who have come by boat are asylum seekers, their status as refugees has not been determined yet and we are obliged to process their claims and help them under international law.
The people in the refugee camps, while refugees, don't have the right to resettlement. They have, as I understand it, made their asylum claim in whatever country they are in and have been found to be refugees.
Moreover, are they not all taken into consideration under our humanitarian intakes?
I would assume so.
Why? Because they have landed here?
No, because they're in New Zealand. /sarcasm
That would simply create a huge pull factor wouldn't it? A pull factor you said wasn't there?
You would think so, but New Zealand has the same obligations and they haven't had to resort to measures like the PS.
Worldwide most refugees don't try to come to Australia, they try to go to Europe, the US and
South Africa (p.36). In fact the UN suggests that this is because of the large number of countries in the region that haven't signed the RC (p. 39) but that despite that only a minority of these people actually make the attempt to get to Australia. According to the UNHCR (2010 report, I know you know which one) Australia had 8250 asylum claims in 2009, Malaysia, a country that hasn't signed the RC, had 40360 in the same year.
Show me the correlating link between the boats and the reduction in asylum seekers. That was your original claim was it not? I fail to see your point being validated.
...
Why don't you show me? Obviously I've looked at it, I fail to see your point being made.
I've already provided the links, they're the ones below the link to the 2010 report. I've already mentioned which tables to look at and the fact that we're having this conversation through the medium of writing means that you are literate.