UPDATE 1-Australia govt holds poll lead as campaign gears up

SYDNEY, July 18 (Reuters) – Australian Prime Minister Julia Gillard is on course for a narrow win in an Aug. 21 election, an opinion poll showed on Sunday, as the economy, border protection and population swiftly emerged as key campaign issues.

Support for the ruling Labor party has rebounded since Gillard, Australia’s first female prime minister, was appointed three weeks ago. Seeking to take advantage of her lead and a robust economy creating jobs, she called an election on Saturday.

But the poll is set to be tight with conservative opposition leader Tony Abbott only needing nine more seats to form a government with four independents, or 13 to take office outright.

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“I genuinely believe this election is on a knife-edge,” Gillard told reporters in Brisbane, adding jobs, the economy and a return to budget surplus could be deciding factors.

A new opinion poll released on Sunday showed the Labor government maintaining a slim lead over the opposition. The Galaxy poll put Labor on 52 percent compared to 48 percent for the conservative opposition.

But the survey showed that the government will have to rely on support from Greens’ voters to ensure victory.

The opinion poll gave Gillard a strong 55 percent to 32 percent lead over Abbott as preferred prime minister.

Financial markets are not expected to react much to the election given there is little to choose on core economic policy.

Despite Labor steering the economy through the global financial crisis and avoiding recession last year, opinion polls show voters view the opposition as better economic managers.

Abbott pledged that interest rates, which have risen six times to 4.5 percent, would be lower if he came to power after accusing the government of boosting debt and living costs.

ASYLUM SEEKERS, MINING TAX

He also accused the government of wasteful spending and pledged to stop the flow of boatpeople heading to Australian waters, a sensitive issue particularly in crowded city areas.

“I think people are right to be concerned about those who arrive unsafely, without papers,” Abbott said on local TV, claiming Australia had become “a soft touch” over boatpeople.

Gillard has proposed a possible East Timor regional asylum processing centre to stop boatpeople arriving in Australia, although Dili has given the plan a cool response. Abbott plans to reopen Pacific island detention camps.

Last month, the asylum seeker issue saw the ruling Labor party lose a key state by-election in western Sydney.

Gillard said the numbers arriving by boat were not large, but “we shouldn’t label people as racist or intolerant or red neck or some other word because they are concerned about boats”.

In her first major campaign speech, Gillard rejected former Prime Minister Kevin Rudd’s “big Australia” idea that could have seen the nation’s population doubling from 22 million now.

“I don’t think we want to hurtle down the track to a population of 36 million or 40 million,” said Gillard, who replaced Rudd in a Labor party coup last month.

Abbott also sought to rekindle a debate over the government’s watered down new mining tax, which he said would give Australia’s mining sector the highest tax rate in the world.

“You do not speed up the slow lane by slowing down the fast lane,” he said, referring to talk of a two-speed Australia with the resource-rich states of Western Australia and Queensland benefiting more than others from high mineral prices.

Abbott has vowed to dump the tax, which the government has said will raise A$10.5 billion ($9.12 billion) from 2012.

(Additional reporting by Michael Perry; Editing by Jeremy Laurence)

Australian PM may call election within days-media

SYDNEY, July 12 (Reuters) – Australia’s ruling Labor party is set for a narrow victory in upcoming elections, two new opinion polls showed on Monday, as speculation grew that Prime Minister Julia Gillard could call an election as soon as this week.

While the robust economy, in its 17th year of growth, should be a winning ticket for Gillard, voters believe the opposition is the better economic manager, according to the polls.

Gillard has also been seeking to reframe government policy in key areas such as climate and asylum seekers.

Opinion polls published in Fairfax and News Ltd newspapers put Labor ahead of the conservative opposition at 52 percent versus 48 percent. For Reuters Poll Trend [ID:nSYU010167]

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TAKE-A-LOOK-Australia’s Greens to sway policy [ID:nSGE667085]

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Gillard, 48, is Australia’s first woman prime minister. She replaced Kevin Rudd on June 24, in a move that has resurrected Labor’s electoral standing and reshaped Australian politics.

Speculation Gillard may be set to call an election grew after Governor-General Quentin Bryce delayed leaving for a trip to Europe by a day until Saturday, sparking talk that Gillard could ask the representative of Australia’s head of state, Queen Elizabeth, to dissolve parliament as early as this week.

Gillard declined to comment on the timing when questioned by reporters on a trip to Adelaide, but said in a speech “in the days to come I will be putting forward more detailed arguments about some of the biggest challenges facing our nation.

“I will be explaining the steps I think we need to take and asking for people’s consideration of those steps. I will ask for the Australian people’s trust to move Australia forward,” she said.

Political commentators said Gillard’s words meant she may seek to call an election on Thursday or Friday this week.

But commentators warned that Labor still risked losing an election expected in late August. [ID:nSGE6600MU]

“The coming of Julia Gillard to the Labor Party leadership appears to have stopped the decay in her party’s fortunes,” said The Age newspaper’s national editor Tony Wright.

“She has stopped the Rudd rot, though she hasn’t been able to make any serious inroads into Labor’s loss of the disaffected to the Greens.”

Labor took power in 2007 promising to tackle climate change, but under Rudd failed to implement a carbon trading scheme, a disappointment that saw Green voters desert Rudd.

Labor needs to woo them back to ensure victory over the Liberal-National opposition.

Gillard has acted quickly on key policies, ending a three-month row with mining companies over a new tax that was hurting the government in the polls, and proposing a regional asylum processing centre, possibly in East Timor, to curb boatpeople arrivals. [ID:nAUTAX]

The tax deal has been generally accepted by voters, but her asylum policy has received criticism for being in its infancy.

The cabinet will meet on Tuesday and was expected to discuss a new climate policy, but it is not clear whether Gillard will go as far as announcing a carbon tax as an interim measure before a full blown carbon trading scheme can be created.

She has said a carbon price is inevitable, probably via a market-based scheme, but that any decision on such a scheme would not be until 2012 and not without community consensus.

But voters want quick action on climate change, according to opinion polls and public comments in local media.

Until now the political risk of announcing a carbon price ahead of an election has been the threat of rising power bills. But two new surveys suggest power bills will rise and energy investment will fall because of a lack of a carbon price.

The lack of an emissions trading scheme and price on carbon would cost the Australian economy and consumers an extra A$2 billion by 2020 due to investment in less energy efficient coal-fired power plants, The Climate Institute estimates. (Additional reporting by Ed Davies; Editing by Alex Richardson)

Australian opposition gets tough on refugees

The opposition coalition on Thursday promised to pay other countries to take asylum seekers off Australia’s hands if it wins elections this year.

Opposition leader Tony Abbott made Australia’s response to a burgeoning number of asylum seekers traveling to Australia by boat an election issue by launching his conservative coalition’s new policy. An election date has yet to set.

Its centerpiece is a revival of the so-called Pacific solution in which Australia paid impoverished island neighbors Nauru and Papua New Guinea to keep asylum seekers in detention centers.

The message to asylum seekers was that they would never set foot on the Australian mainland. However, many were eventually settled in Australia after sometimes spending years in offshore camps.

Human rights groups attacked the policy as punitive when the previous coalition government introduced it in 2001, months ahead of an election.

Prime Minister Kevin Rudd scrapped the policy when his center-left Labor Party won government in 2007, but he continues to keep most boat arrivals in a crowded camp on the remote Australian Indian Ocean territory of Christmas Island while their refugees claims are assessed.

Abbott has blamed the government’s softening of Australia’s asylum seeker stance for more than 4,000 people arriving by boat in the past year, many of them Afghans and Sri Lankans who paid Indonesian people smugglers to ship them to Australia.

“I am a big risk to people smugglers,” Abbott told reporters. “If I get elected, people smugglers will go out of business.”

Abbott declined to identify the countries he planned to negotiate with or estimate how much they would be paid to house the overflow of asylum seekers from Christmas island.

Rudd attempted to slow the flow earlier this year by imposing a three-month freeze on processing asylum claims from Sri Lankans and Afghans – a development condemned on Thursday in the annual report of London-based human rights organization Amnesty International.

Abbott also promised to revive another measure scrapped by Rudd – temporary protection visas.

Under the visas, bona fide refugees would have to prove after three years that they would still face persecution if they returned to their homelands.

Under the current permanent visas, asylum seekers only have to prove their refugee status once.

During their temporary stay, refugees would also have to work for their welfare benefits, an opposition statement said.

Human Resources Minister Chris Bowen said refugees were already required to work, study English or train to gain employment skills.

The work obligations “are actually rules that we introduced, toughened from the previous government’s arrangements,” Bowen told Australian Broadcasting Corp. radio.

Arguments about which side of politics is tougher on asylum seekers have raged in Australian election campaigns since the first wave of Vietnamese refugees fled to Australia from the aftermath of Vietnam War in the late 1970s.

Asia moved little on human rights in 2009 – Amnesty

Asia did little to improve human rights in 2009 with nations more focused on internal problems, despite outbreaks of abuse including a tightening of civil liberties in China, Amnesty International said on Thursday.

In its 2010 annual report on the global state of human rights, Amnesty said governments were blocking progress on human rights by refusing to join the International Criminal Court (ICC) or by shielding their allies from justice.

Amnesty said the justice gap was still starkly apparent in Asia, with refugees from Afghanistan and Pakistan’s northwest frontier, the execution of 57 people by a private militia in the Philippines and the loss of civilian life in Sri Lanka towards the end of its separatist war with the Tamil Tigers last year.

“Slow moves towards institutionalising human rights and pursuing international justice have been undermined by political game-playing, and the deepening plight of migrant workers, migrants and asylum-seekers,” said Amnesty.

Abuses by serial offenders like North Korea and Myanmar, along with repression in Vietnam and Fiji, “remained unchecked by regional powers as even relatively progressive governments focused more on their internal problems”, it said.

On China, the report noted a softening of international pressure on China’s human rights abuses given its growing international economic and political clout.

A string of sensitive anniversaries last year saw China clamp down on freedom of expression, while pressure on dissidents and lawyers increased. Chinese human rights lawyers saw their licenses revoked, while leading dissidents like Liu Xiaobo, who drafted the Charter 08 manifesto calling for sweeping political reforms, were given stiff jail terms.

“I do wonder if the Chinese government is losing confidence,” said Catherine Baber, Amnesty’s Deputy Director for Asia-Pacific.

“It does not like the idea of lawyers fully utilising the means that they now have to protect victims of human rights.”

Amnesty did cited some gains in human rights in Asia.

The Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) ratified a charter with provisions to establish a human rights body, while several Asian countries that retain the death penalty including India, Indonesia and Pakistan didn’t carry out any executions.

Australian Government to spend millions to fight spread of radical Islam

Sydney, May 8 (ANI): The Australian Government will be earmarking millions of dollars to check the spread of radical Islam in the country. The measure comes as part of a Federal Budget package to boost national security.

The Federal Budget to be announced on Tuesday is especially significant as it comes in an election-year. Prime Minister Kevin Rudd’s Government is focusing on strengthening national security to appease Australian citizens.

There has been heightened concern over the security issue following a deluge of asylum-seekers who manage to enter the country unintercepted.

In view of these concerns, the Government will announce “preventative” measures to counter the growth of radical terrorist cells across Australia, The Daily Telegraph reports.

The Government will implement its programmes carefully in order to avoid demonizing the Muslim community and the new measures will tackle potential spread of extremism in the nation’s jails, the paper said.

The Budget is expected to outline a national scheme, with religious classes and better contact between inmates and their families. This could minimize interactions that could potentially lead to the formation of radical Muslim caucuses, it added. (ANI)

Navy makes changes after SIEV 36 inquiry

The Royal Australian Navy says operational changes are being made to ensure the SIEV 36 tragedy is not repeated.

The asylum seeker boat exploded near Ashmore Reef last year. Five asylum seekers were killed and dozens more were injured in the blast.

Crew from HMAS Albany provided treatment to 13 Afghan casualties in a makeshift burns unit on board their vessel.

The last of 51 commendations were today presented to Defence personnel who were involved in the rescue of asylum seekers.

Two patrol boat crews received a commendation, while Corporal Sharon Jagher received an individual gold commendation for her efforts on the day she described as the worst of her life.

A coronial inquiry found asylum seekers had lit petrol after being warned they would be returned to Indonesia.

But the inquiry also heard the incident could have been prevented if Defence personnel had properly searched the boat for petrol and matches and not agitated the asylum seekers by asking them to return to Indonesia.

Rear Admiral Tim Barrett says the coroner’s recommendations are being implemented despite claims to the contrary from the Asylum Seeker Resource Centre.

“Most if not all of those actions are either complete or are very much underway to being complete,” he said.

Defence crew commended for SIEV 36 rescue

Twenty defence personnel have received commendations for their bravery during a fatal boat explosion near Ashmore Reef last year.

The asylum seeker boat known as SIEV 36 exploded near Ashmore reef last year.

Five asylum seekers were killed and dozens more were injured in the blast.

Crew from HMAS Albany provided treatment to 13 Afghan casualties in a makeshift burns unit on board their vessel.

Today, Rear Admiral Tim Barrett praised their skill and compassion for human life.

Two patrol boat crews received a commendation, while Corporal Sharon Jagher received an individual gold commendation for her efforts on the day she described as the worst of her life.

Commendations for Navy personnel who rescued asylum-seekers

Navy personnel who helped rescue asylum-seekers after a boat explosion near Ashmore Reef last year have received commendations for their efforts.

Two Navy boats were accompanying a boat carrying 47 asylum-seekers to Christmas Island last year when the incident happened.

Five people were killed.

Able Seaman Quinton Boorman was involved in the mass rescue of survivors.

“We just went around and collected basically whoever we could out of the water,” he said.

Commander of Border Protection Rear Admiral Tim Barrett presented Able Seaman Boorman and 13 other Cairns-based Navy personnel with commendations.

“I think the efforts of the crew saved a lot more people who could’ve lost their lives,” he said.

Lieutenant Commander Brett Westcott coordinated the rescue effort.

He was presented with a special commendation from the Defence Force chief.

Detainees destined for air base

The Department of Immigration says it expects to have Curtin Air Base up and running as a detention centre within two weeks.

The department says staff are conducting an audit of what beds and facilities are already available at the base and has already begun talking to local contractors about what services they can provide once the detainees arrive.

A spokesperson for the department says there are more than 200 beds available as part of the air base’s barrack-style accommodation.

It is understood the Afghan and Sri Lankan asylum seekers will use these rather than rely on dongas being brought in.

Good weather linked to asylum spike

A lack of cyclonic activity in the North West has been touted as a possible contributor to the high number of asylum seekers intercepted in Australian waters.

More than 40 boats have been intercepted by Australian authorities this year.

Two tropical cyclones have crossed the Kimberley coast this season, three fewer than the average.

Andrew Bartlett, researcher of migration law at the Australian National University, says weather patterns can play a part in the flow of asylum seekers.

“Certainly, one of the factors is the storm season or the cyclone season across the tropics. There’s less likelihood of boats seeking to make their way across,” he said.

“I guess the big unknown is whether the boats would have come anyway and whether they would have sat and waited for a couple of months.”

More detainees to be moved from Christmas Island

The Federal Government is planning to transfer more people from Christmas Island later today.

The number of asylum seekers in the island’s detention centre is beyond the official capacity of 2,040.

Several boats intercepted in the past couple of days are still to arrive on the island.

Last week, the Federal Government suspended the processing of new refugee claims from Sri Lankan and Afghani asylum seekers.

‘Escalation inevitable’ on Christmas Island

The Federal Opposition says overcrowding at the Christmas Island detention centre is becoming a serious issue, after another two boatloads of asylum seekers were intercepted off northern Australia yesterday.

The latest arrivals come just days after the Federal Government announced that refugees from Sri Lanka and Afghanistan will have to wait up to six months to have their claims processed.

Opposition immigration spokesman Scott Morrison says an escalation in tensions at the centre is inevitable.

“Christmas Island was never built and designed to cope with the failures of Rudd Government policies,” he said.

“And it is very concerning that the staff of our immigration department, customs agencies and other official agencies are being asked to work under these very difficult circumstances and pressures for no other reason than that the Government’s policies have failed.”

Two more boats sent to Christmas Island

Two more boats carrying suspected asylum seekers are on their way to Christmas Island after they were intercepted on Sunday.

The latest boat was discovered near the Ashmore Islands this afternoon carrying 30 passengers and four crew.

Another boat carrying 27 people was detected this morning off the Kimberley coast.

It is the 110th illegal entry boat to have entered Australian waters since the Federal Government softened its immigration policy in August 2008.

The Minister for Home Affairs says if the passengers on board are Sri Lankan or Afghan nationals, their claims will not be considered in line with the new policy that was announced on Friday.

Suspended asylum applications puts pressure on Indonesia

The Indonesian ambassador to Australia says Australia’s stance against Afghani and Sri Lankan asylum seekers is likely to put more pressure on Indonesia.

The Federal Government is suspending the processing of all new applications for protection by people from Sri Lanka and Afghanistan.

Ambassador Primo Alui Joelianto says Indonesia is likely feel the impact.

“It means they have to transit in one place and unfortunately the place is Indonesia so to some extent of course we will feel the difficulty in having them in our territory,” he said.

The Federal Opposition says the arrival of three asylum seeker boats shows that suspending refugee applications for Sri Lankans and Afghanis has not worked.

A boat carrying 27 people was intercepted off the Kimberley Coast this morning.

It is the third to be caught since the Government’s announcement on Friday that some asylum applications will not be processed for up to six months.

The Coalition’s spokesman, Michael Keenan, says it shows the Government’s approach is not working.

“I think the people smugglers actions speak much louder than Kevin Rudd’s words,” he said.

“This third arrival since the Government’s announcement on Friday also brings up another grim milestone for the Government which is over 5,000 illegal arrivals since they weakened Australia’s border protection laws in August of 2008.

“It’s actually the Australian Government that controls the flow of immigration into Australia,” he said.

“At the moment that’s not the case. And we do think the Government should take action but I don’t think this action will necessarily make much difference.

“It’s more about pretending to be tough.”

But the Prime Minister has defended the Government’s approach.

“Our policy is very clear cut – our obligations are to deal with genuine asylum seekers and those who are not genuine asylum seekers to send them back to their countries of origin. That is the Governmnent’s consistent position,” Mr Rudd said.

Smith backs suspensions

Foreign Affairs Minister Stephen Smith has defended returning asylum seekers to Afghanistan even though the Government’s advice is that it is unsafe for Australians to go there.

The Government argues it is becoming safer in Sri Lanka and Afghanistan and more likely applicants will be sent back because their asylum claims will be refused.

But it advises Australians not to travel to Afghanistan.

Mr Smith has told Channel Nine the refugee decision is made on a different basis.

“It’s a qualititatively different question about the straightforward security of a country,” he said.

“It is not applicable or appropriate to try and align advice that we give to the Australian travelling public about particular countries and whether you or don’t qualify to be a refugee under the convention.”

Immigration Minister Chris Evans says the Government is acting in the nation’s best interests in deciding to suspend refugee applications from Sri Lanka for three months and Afghanistan for six months.

Senator Evans says 400 additional beds will be set up at Christmas Island in the coming weeks to cope with extra occupants expected as a result of the Government’s decision.

He says the Darwin Immigration Centre is also an option to house the asylum seekers.

Asylum seekers intercepted off Kimberley coast

A boat carrying 27 asylum seekers was intercepted off the Kimberley coast this morning.

The people on board will be taken to Christmas Island for processing.

Three boats have now been intercepted since the Government announced on Friday it would suspend processing asylum claims by Sri Lankans and Afghanis.

Asylum seeker policy causing distress

A lawyer working with asylum seekers on Christmas Island says the detainees are becoming increasingly distressed by the Federal Government’s policy changes.

The government has suspended the processing of all new applications for protection by people from Sri Lanka and Afghanistan.

Asylum seekers from those two nations who are already on Christmas Island will still have their claims processed.

The Director of the Refugee and Immigration Legal Centre David Manne says the level of unrest at the facility has grown.

“There is a strong level of fear amongst even those who have been told that they won’t be caught out by the announcement that somehow they too will be negatively affected,” he said.

“There is a real level among some of the asylum seekers of confusion and of distress.”

Extra federal police have been sent to Christmas Island to deal with any backlash to the policy change.

Labor ‘pretending to be tough’ on immigration

The Federal Opposition says stopping the flow of refugee boats rather than suspending asylum seeker applications should be the Government’s priority.

Immigration Minister Chris Evans says the Government is acting in the nation’s best interests in deciding to suspend refugee applications from Sri Lanka for three months and Afghanistan for six months.

But the Opposition spokesman for customs and border protection, Michael Keenan, says the interception of two boats within 24 hours of the Government announcing its new policy shows it will not stop the flow of boats.

“It’s actually the Australian Government that controls the flow of immigration into Australia,” he said.

“At the moment that’s not the case. And we do think the Government should take action but I don’t think this action will necessarily make much difference.

“It’s more about pretending to be tough.”

Senator Evans says 400 additional beds will be set up at Christmas Island in the coming weeks to cope with extra occupants expected as a result of the Government’s decision.

He says the Darwin Immigration Centre is also an option to house the asylum seekers.

But Mr Keenan says the Government is breaking a promise to Australians if it chooses to use the centre.

“They promised they wouldn’t process people on the Australian mainland, now they’re going to break that promise,” he said.

“They should really try and stick to that promise but then of course the only way of doing that is to try and actually stop the number of illegal arrivals that are coming down.”

The president of the Multicultural Council of the Northern Territory says there is too much focus on asylum seekers who reach Australia by boat.

Sabaratnam Prathapan says recent boat arrivals have been taken out of proportion.

“There are other people, especially from Europe, who come by air and they overstay here and nobody seems to worry about that, maybe because they come from Europe,” he said.

“Only a small percentage of the people who come come by boat and we seem to make a big fuss about it.”

‘Redneck policy’

Meanwhile, Greens Senator Sarah Hanson-Young wants the Government to prove that its new policy on asylum seekers does not breach Australia’s Racial Discrimination Act.

The Government has said it has strong legal advice suggesting that the policy is within the law.

But Senator Hanson-Young is not so sure and says the Government should release that advice to the public.

“You don’t determine somebody’s refugee status on the basis of where they come from, you determine their refugee status on the basis of their claim,” she said.

“If we suspend all processing of claims, and detain people indefinitely, then we cannot be sure whether these people are refugees or whether we are detaining people who should be deported.

“It’s not right for the government to simply – for the sake of political gain – detain people indefinitely because they have made some decision that perhaps Sri Lanka or Afghanistan is a safe place to be – it’s clearly not.”

Senator Hanson-Young yesterday described the action as a “redneck” policy, which proves that Mr Rudd is a “coward”.

The Government says conditions in those two countries are improving, and its likely fewer claims will be successful.

Refugee lawyers are considering taking the Commonwealth to court, arguing it has breached administrative law by discriminating against a race of people.

The Human Rights Commission has also condemned the move as a breach of Australia’s international obligations.

Australia suspends Sri Lankan, Afghan asylum claims

(Reuters) – Australia has suspended processing new claims for asylum from Afghans and Sri Lankans as the government seeks to defuse an election-year row on immigration.

World

Prime Minister Kevin Rudd’s government, due to seek a second term from voters late in 2010, is under pressure to halt the arrival of boatpeople off the country’s remote northwest coast which has stoked public concern about border security laws.

The conservative oppositions are promising to bring back tougher border laws, if they win the 2010 election, possibly threatening Rudd’s strong popularity in a country where voters are typically fractured over immigration.

“We have taken a consistently hardline approach to people smuggling and today’s announcements will further strengthen the integrity of Australia’s immigration system,” Immigration Minister Chris Evans told reporters on Friday.

Evans said new applications from Sri Lanka will be suspended for three months, while those from Afghanistan will be suspended for six months, citing improving security in those countries.

Asylum seekers from either country are the main source of boatpeople arriving in Australia.

The Australian Greens party rejected the suspensions as “totally inhumane.”

“We have what is Kevin Rudd’s redneck solution in the lead-up to the election campaign. We are in very dangerous water,” Greens Senator Sarah Hanson-Young told reporters.

Rudd, riding high in opinion polls, is expected to win a second three-year term from voters, but his popularity has wobbled lately amid controversies over health and education, climate change policies and border security.

SINKING BOAT

The new policy was announced as a sinking boat with 70 people was intercepted by the Australian navy south of Indonesia near Christmas Island, home to an Australian detention center.

The vessel was the 38th to arrive in Australian waters this year in an influx threatening to spark a re-run of the racially-tinged 2001 election, which was fought largely over immigration and border security and unexpectedly won by then-ruling conservative prime minister John Howard.

Rudd has been accused of being soft on border protection after dismantling Howard’s hardline policies since his victory in 2007, and speeding refugee processing times.

In a little over three months this year, 1,878 immigrants and 96 crew have arrived by boat in a surge that if it continues, will make 2010 will be the biggest year yet for unauthorized arrivals on record, exceeding the 5,000 who arrived in 2001.

Last year, 2,706 asylum seekers and 115 crew made it to Australia in the first full year of the Rudd government’s new immigration policies, up from 142 in 2008.

Evans said he did not expect the suspensions would immediately stem boat arrivals, but said he was hopeful that “over time” it would have an impact on regional people smuggling operations behind Australia’s recent influx.

(Editing by Michael Perry)

Extra police sent to Christmas Island

Extra Federal Police have been sent to Christmas Island to deal with any fallout from the Government’s decision to change its refugee policy.

The Government has suspended refugee processing for Sri Lankan and Afghani asylum seekers, although it will not affect those who are already on Christmas Island.

The Opposition’s Justice and Customs spokesman, Michael Keenan, says that could lead to tension between asylum seekers.

He is concerned other police operations may suffer.

“We’re very concerned about the conditions on Christmas Island,” he said.

“You wonder what duties [the AFP] have been redeployed from to have to go up there to make up for the Rudd Government’s failures.”

A Government spokesman says the AFP makes its own deployment decisions.

Refugee advocate David Manne has slammed the new policy, saying it could lead to a violation of asylum seekers’ human rights.

He described the suspension of refugee processing as “indefinite, prolonged periods of incarceration in prison like conditions.”

“It may well cause considerable confusion and frustration,” he said.

Last month, Immigration Minister Chris Evans told the Senate that the Government did not want to hold people in detention for long periods of time.

There are now 2161 asylum seekers in the island’s detention centre – about 120 above the official capacity.

The Immigration Department is preparing to fly more people off the island as early as today.

Two boats that have been intercepted in recent days are still to arrive.

UN reviews guidelines

The Government’s path was smoothed by the fact the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees is reviewing its protection guidelines for asylum seekers fleeing from those two countries, as revealed on this program a month ago.

Doctor Sam Pari, from the National Tamil Congress, says the Government’s move will not make much difference because Tamils continue to be persecuted and oppressed.

“The only way that the Australian Government can deter asylum seekers from coming here is by looking at the root cause,” he said.

“The problem is the Sri Lankan government. The Australian Government should put pressure on Sri Lanka to start treating its Tamil citizens equally and justly.”

Refugee lawyer David Mann, who headed to Christmas Island on Friday, says the suspension will undermine Australia’s international obligations.

“This strategy is essentially designed to avoid obligations which are currently owed to people seeking refugee status,” he said.

“This strategy… flies in the face of our international obligations to properly assess refugee claims at the time they’re made.

“The other real concern here is that we face a situation of asylum seekers being held in prolonged detention without just cause leaving people in legal limbo in detention, cause profound harm and in many cases crush people.

Amnesty says the asylum suspension is inconsistent with Australia’s international obligations, but the UNHCR’s regional representative, Richard Towle, is reserving judgment.

“I haven’t had a chance to look at the policy or the implications of the policy to see how it matches with the Refugee Convention or any … other obligations that Australia might have, but we’ll be looking at those sorts of thing in the fullness of time,” he said.

“The key thing is to make sure that people who are in the suspended position are able to live dignified and humane lives while they’re waiting this period.”

Asylum freeze ‘politically motivated’

The Federal Opposition has attacked the Government’s decision to suspend asylum seeker claims from Sri Lanka and Afghanistan, saying it is politically motivated and will not stop the boats coming to Australia.

Prime Minister Kevin Rudd says the suspension – of three months for Sri Lankans and six months for Afghanis – is due to “changing circumstances” in both countries.

But Opposition Leader Tony Abbott says it shows the Government knows its policy is failing.

“This is an admission by the Government that it was always pull factors – not push factors – that was causing the flow of boats,” he said.

Opposition immigration spokesman Scott Morrison says the Government has known for a month that the situations in Afghanistan and Sri Lanka were changing.

“It simply prompts you to ask the question: why today?” he said.

“All they have done is try to put this issue into suspended animation. What they haven’t done is put forward a plan to stop the boats.”

Mr Morrison says the Government is putting off action on dealing with asylum seekers until after the upcoming federal election.

“They are going to clog up the system even more as boat after boat after boat arrives,” he said.

“Clearly they will just spill onto the mainland as they already have now.”

Greens Senator Sarah Hanson-Young says the suspension will be as dangerous for asylum seekers as the previous government’s system of temporary protection visas.

“The decision of the Government to change their policies are less about the conditions in these countries and more about the political conditions here in Australia,” she said.

“This is about politics. This is not about humanity.”

Immigration Minister Chris Evans says Sri Lankans and Afghanis already on Christmas Island will still have their applications processed, as will those currently bring taken there by the Navy.

But he says from now on, anyone from those countries who is intercepted will be taken to the island and will have to wait until the suspension is lifted.

‘Morally abhorrent’

Human Rights Commission president Catherine Branson says the Government’s changes mean asylum seekers will be detained indefinitely.

She says the commission is considering another visit to Christmas Island to monitor the conditions there.

“We did late last year publish a quite comprehensive report about Christmas Island, but I am very conscious of the fact that conditions there have changed since that time and not for the better,” Ms Branson said.

“We are considering the possibility of again travelling to Christmas Island to update our report.”

Bassina Farbenblum, the director of the University of NSW Migrant and Refugee Rights Project, says the Government’s move breaches the UN’s Refugee Convention.

She says it is immoral to detain Afghanis and Sri Lankans for long periods to deter other asylum seekers.

“It is profoundly discriminatory. Australia will be violating it’s international obligations to detain people for the minimum necessary period, and honestly it’s morally abhorrent,” Ms Farbenblum said.

The Refugee Council says while it is not supporting the suspension, it is a legitimate response to the problem of asylum seekers provided people are not sent back to face persecution.

“This is an attempt to crack a circuit breaker and I can understand why they’re doing that, as long as they continue to adhere to the humane policies which they have supported,” Refugee Council president John Gibson said.

“We will just have to keep a very close eye on what’s going on.”

Mr Gibson says he is concerned the Government’s decision has been made without proper scrutiny of the conditions in Sri Lanka and Afghanistan.

He says there needs to be lasting improvement before refugees from those countries are treated any differently.

“When there is a change of circumstances it should be sustainable and durable, and as far as Sri Lanka is concerned – and possibly some parts of Afghanistan – one would have to look carefully at whether in fact that is the case,” Mr Gibson said.

And he says the hysteria that has taken hold of Australians over the asylum seeker issue remains.

“I’d like to see the shift and focus towards the positive solutions, looking globally and regionally, rather than this obsession over how many boats arrive,” he said.

He says the number of asylum seekers accepted in Australia still pales in comparison to those accepted in other countries.