dibo
Well-Known Member
I'm a little surprised nobody's talked about the boat sinking off Java:
I'm not thrilled with Bowen's line. He's right that the journey is the problem, and that we need to get people to not take the boat journey. Playing the blame game with corpses as pawns is f**king disgusting though. He could simply argue positively and strongly in favour of his case rather than pouring a bucket of shit over people.
Moral high ground - who needs it?
Anyway, it shows why a regional solution is important to try to prevent people taking the boat trip. Nobody from any party should think that it's a good idea for people to be hopping in fishing boats and hoping for the best.
SMH: Failure of Malaysia deal caused boat deaths: minister
Kirsty Needham
November 2, 2011 - 12:21PM
Immigration Minister Chris Bowen has directly linked the drowning of up to 27 asylum seekers yesterday with the collapse of the Malaysia refugee swap deal, and hit out at the Greens for making the "extraordinary" call to create safer pathways for refugees to come to Australia after the tragedy.
Mr Bowen said the Malaysia deal was designed to do "exactly" that, "creating safer pathways, increasing the humanitarian intake, taking more people out of places like Malaysia".
"For Senator [Sarah] Hanson-Young to say we need to create more safe pathways when her party, and she in particular, have been remorseless in opposing the Malaysia arrangement ... I just found breathtaking and extraordinary," Mr Bowen told ABC Radio today.
Senator Hanson-Young had urged the government to consider increasing its annual humanitarian intake.
"Safe pathways have to be at the cornerstone of any policy," she said
Mr Bowen said he had argued consistently that if the Malaysia deal was blocked, there would be more deaths at sea.
"I have never been more disappointed to be proven right," he said.
"This is a terrible tragedy but it is a fact that, when you have more boats coming to Australia, you will see more deaths. We didn't adopt the Malaysia arrangement because it was politically easy or it was convenient, quite the opposite. We adopted it because we knew that this was the sort of arrangement that was necessary to avoid more deaths at sea, and that's exactly what we've seen."
But he stopped short of openly blaming the opposition, which has refused to pass legislation to overcome the court ban on the Malaysia swap deal in Parliament.
Mr Bowen also said the arrival of another boat carrying 92 asylum seekers off Christmas Island yesterday, the sixth since the policy shift to onshore processing, showed there had been an "uptake of boat arrivals" since the Malaysia deal collapsed, which the government had also predicted.
Opposition immigration spokesman Scott Morrison said the government could have its legislation clear Parliament if it accepted Coalition amendments.
But he refused to blame government policy for the drowning deaths.
"It is unhelpful to engage in that sort of rhetoric," he told ABC Radio, adding criminal people smugglers were to blame.
Mr Morrison said the "terrible tragedy" should not be used as political leverage by the government or anyone else.
- with AAP
SMH: Plea to Liberals: agree to swap deal
November 2, 2011 - 12:21PM
The federal government is urging the Coalition to reconsider its opposition to the Malaysia people-swap solution in light of the drowning deaths of asylum seekers en route to Australia.
But the opposition says the tragic event should not be used for political purposes.
At least seven people were confirmed dead late yesterday by Indonesian authorities, who said the vessel went down just hours after leaving from a port in Central Java.
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The death toll was expected to rise with as many as 20 people still missing.
Immigration Minister Chris Bowen says the boat, which was well inside Indonesian waters, was clearly heading towards Australia.
He called on the opposition to support government legislation legalising offshore processing which would allow the Malaysian solution to proceed.
The government has put that legislation on hold pending sufficient backing in both houses of Parliament.
"The type of arrangement we negotiated with Malaysia is an effective deterrent," he told ABC Television, adding it could prevent "tragic deaths at sea".
"Until and unless we are able to implement that, we will see more boats arriving."
The Coalition insists that Malaysia be excluded from the list of third countries nominated for offshore processing because it is not a signatory to the UN refugee convention.
It wants the mothballed detention centre on Nauru reopened, a measure rejected by the government.
"Opening a Nauru detention centre by itself would provide no deterrent to getting on boats," Mr Bowen said.
Opposition immigration spokesman Scott Morrison said the government could have its legislation clear Parliament if it accepted Coalition amendments.
But he refused to blame government policy for the drowning deaths.
"It is unhelpful to engage in that sort of rhetoric," he told ABC Radio, adding criminal people smugglers were to blame.
Mr Morrison said the "terrible tragedy" should not be used as political leverage by the government or anyone else.
I'm not thrilled with Bowen's line. He's right that the journey is the problem, and that we need to get people to not take the boat journey. Playing the blame game with corpses as pawns is f**king disgusting though. He could simply argue positively and strongly in favour of his case rather than pouring a bucket of shit over people.
Moral high ground - who needs it?
Anyway, it shows why a regional solution is important to try to prevent people taking the boat trip. Nobody from any party should think that it's a good idea for people to be hopping in fishing boats and hoping for the best.