a_unique_person
Director of Hatcheries and Conditioning
Is there some kind of award for the most self bounced thread? Most crocodile tears?
Prominent lawyer George Newhouse, who is representing survivors of last year's Christmas Island boat tragedy, said heavy penalties for people smuggling meant untrained "stooges" were in charge of vessels.
"To make matters worse, the government's policy of confiscating boats means the vessels which are used to transport asylum seekers are often unseaworthy - with disastrous results," he said.
Refugee Action Coalition coordinator Ian Rintoul agreed the decision to criminalise people smuggling had played a role in the latest tragedy.
"If the government is worried about people losing their lives at sea, they should decriminalise people smuggling so that the voyages can be planned in open and seaworthy boats," he said.
Mr Rintoul, anticipating expressions of sympathy from the government and the opposition, accused both sides of hypocrisy.
He called on the government and opposition to back a massive increase to Australia's refugee intake, end mandatory detention, decriminalise people smuggling and drop offshore processing as a policy option.
http://news.smh.com.au/breaking-new...d-for-asylum-boat-sinking-20111218-1p0jq.html
The real blame here should be laid at the feet of the policies that destroy "smuggler" boats and slap "smugglers" with hefty jail sentences, meaning that refugees are going to sea on unseaworthy boats with poorly trained and educated crews, usually poor fisherman trying to make a living for their families. It is the criminal aspect that leads to tragedies like this
Clearly the Australian authorities should provide the smugglers with seaworthy boats and pay a bounty for every live body they deliver to Australian territory. That's how the old timey slave trade worked.
Slave trade? What a facile and asinine analogy to make. And, no, we don't need to do any of those things. Just not actively creating the conditions whereby smugglers are motivated to use disposable boats and disposable crews.
<whinge>
I predict 20.000 boat arrivals in 2012 using these following figures only.
<some numbers>
Denial? Of what? I’m still waiting for some evidence that supports your (currently baseless) assertion that illegal immigration rates are principally related to government policy. Certainly you never responded to that excellent graph provided to you that illustrated that immigration rates moved perfectly in sync with global refugee statistics (which of course had nothing to do with Australian Government policy).
The smugglers have less concern for their cargo than they would for livestock. Assuming they will become saints and do the right thing if penalties were removed is naive. The trade is supported by at one end by people who don't care about deaths, and at the other by people willing to use those deaths to advocate "decrimnalization".
It's a better idea than what the sick bastards on your side of the debate propose, the jailing and mental torture of men women and children in extralegal hellholes in the middle of the Pacific as a deterrent to others, because you're oh-so human and all![]()
You may as well just go all out and execute a few live on television, that'll surely act as more of a deterrent.
Assylum seekers were executed on Christmas Island live on TV last year? Wait. What?
Assylum seekers were executed on Christmas Island live on TV last year? Wait. What?
As opposed to others who advocate letting people (predictably) drown at sea. Much more humane from the really, and truly sick bastards on your side of the debate.
We saw your policies effectively execute 50 of them live at Christmas Island 12 months ago brains, it didn't work then.
You must be so proud of the influence themoronsGreens have to enable them to have such humane policies as we have now. The same policies that have cost just a few hundred more lives.
Perhaps you'll respond to this post and the one to which it refers: