Like I said, if it had been unclear at the time all you needed to do was ask.
Why though? Why should we be the ones to ask for clarification because you're too lazy to make yourself clear in the first place?
Like I said, if it had been unclear at the time all you needed to do was ask.
Like I said, if it had been unclear at the time all you needed to do was ask.
Why though? Why should we be the ones to ask for clarification because you're too lazy to make yourself clear in the first place?
You assume that people care enough about your opinion to ask you to articulate.

So to bring this thread back on topic I'll ask everyone who isn't Alfie a question:
If you were given the ability to implement any border security policy that you wanted, what kind of policy would you create?
Perhaps we can make refugee processing easier through key Australian embassies in Asia, Africa and the Middle East.
So to bring this thread back on topic I'll ask everyone who isn't Alfie a question:
If you were given the ability to implement any border security policy that you wanted, what kind of policy would you create?
- Back to Nauru to stop the boats.
- Increase our annual intake.
- A joint regional venture in conjunction with the UNHCR to establish camps in (say) Malaysia for potential boat people to access and register for asylum/refugee status.
So to bring this thread back on topic I'll ask everyone who isn't Alfie a question:
If you were given the ability to implement any border security policy that you wanted, what kind of policy would you create?
That is the million dollar question, Wildy. My goals would be:
- To reduce the time spent in detention while being processed.
- To not have children in detention.
- To reduce the number of people embarking on dangerous boat journeys.
I recognize that the success in the first goal may well lead to failure in the last goal.
Perhaps we can make refugee processing easier through key Australian embassies in Asia, Africa and the Middle East.
Doubling or tripling our intake wouldn't hurt either. I reckon we need a floating cap too so that we can accommodate fluctuations in global demand or when we have a regional crisis as per the collapse of the Tamil tigers in Sri Lanka last year.
This may be a naive reply.
But, I think the U.N. should step up to the line and set up "orderly"refugee centres in areas close to trouble spots to stop people making hazardous trips.
These centres would quickly asses for refugee status. Once a status is found, that is refugee, suitable countries should take these people in an orderly manner.
Am I being naive?
So to bring this thread back on topic I'll ask everyone who isn't Alfie a question:
If you were given the ability to implement any border security policy that you wanted, what kind of policy would you create?
Lifting protection standards in the region so they can safely apply for UNHCR protection in Malaysia or Indonesia, with faster assessment and resettlement options will take away the need for refugees to risk their lives on the high seas.
A return simply to offshore processing would set back genuine progress on regional cooperation, and provide no incentive for Indonesia, Malaysia and Thailand to sign up to the Refugee Convention.
Providing safe pathways and durable solutions for asylum seekers in our region can be achieved by:
Ignoring our international obligations to assess people’s claims on-shore by expelling them to Nauru or Malaysia or elsewhere for short-term political gain won’t prevent people who will continue to try escaping persecution.
- Increasing our Humanitarian Intake from 13,750 to up to 25,000;
- Providing greater support to Indonesia and Malaysia and the UNHCR in these countries for faster processing and re-settling of asylum seekers;
- Establishing targeted in-country resettlement programs in countries like Afghanistan and Sri Lanka
- Committing to directly resettle several thousand genuine refugees from Malaysia and Indonesia per year;
- Working cooperatively with regional governments to provide basic protections (without fear of arbitrary detention or expulsion) while waiting for durable resettlement options – consistent with the Refugee Convention.
- Actively encouraging all countries to implement anti-people smuggling laws that punish the people smugglers, not the asylum seekers.
Onshore assessments can work. Here are four measures which, combined with a genuine regional protection framework, can be implemented right now:
It's time for the Government to take a long-term, durable approach to protecting refugees and asylum seekers within our immediate region. A return to failed policies of the past that damaged vulnerable people should not even be an option.
- Ensure we are not locking up people in detention unnecessarily, a practice followed by every other signatory to the convention;
- Introduce 30-day time-limits on detention – health & security checks, with assessment of refugee claims to be done in community;
- Provide judicial review of detention any longer than 30 days (where needed);
- Establish a Commonwealth Commissioner for Children and Young People, to provide unaccompanied minors with a legal guardian, who is not the Minister of the day.
http://greensmps.org.au/content/genuine-regional-protection-framework
http://www.heraldsun.com.au/news/more-news/tv-ban-on-asylum-seekers/story-fn7x8me2-1226231495771
TV stations may be banned from showing images of asylum seekers arriving in Australia by boat, The Australian reported today.
If this is true one has to wonder about the motives.
I fail to see how the privacy of the refugees is an issue, I'd have thought they would have wanted us to know of their plight. It rings more like Gillard and/or the Immigration Dept are endeavouring to stifle discussion, manage adverse press and get some control on the issue.
Gillard has form in silencing debate too.
Ask yourself this, if Howard had made the same ruling under his watch, what would have been the attitude?
eta. If you're interested, here's the Australian's report. It will also be interesting to see if the Drum, Age etc cover this - I haven't seen anything in them so far.
http://www.theaustralian.com.au/nat...of-boat-arrivals/story-fn9hm1gu-1226231422676
Linda Briskman, professor of human rights education at Curtin University, said blocking pictures of detainees was a form of censorship. "From a public-interest perspective, it is hard to justify," she said.
Professor Briskman, who regularly visits detainees and has documented their stories as co-author of Human Rights Overboard, said it was important to see the hope, relief and happiness of people who had fled danger for a new life in Australia.
"By not portraying the human face of the asylum-seeker, they become dehumanised, criminalised and it's easier for people to ignore their suffering," she said. "Photos allow us to empathise, especially when we look into the eyes of children."
It isn't just the arrivals by boat but also those in detention. Again, I ask what would have been the attitude if this occurred under a coalition government?
That is the million dollar question, Wildy. My goals would be:
- To reduce the time spent in detention while being processed.
- To not have children in detention.
- To reduce the number of people embarking on dangerous boat journeys.
I recognize that the success in the first goal may well lead to failure in the last goal.
Perhaps we can make refugee processing easier through key Australian embassies in Asia, Africa and the Middle East.
If there is no noise about this then opposition is asleep and Greens and Democrats too.
As I see it one of the reasons why people go to the smugglers is because it's difficult for these people to use safer modes of transport to get here and apply for asylum.