20 JanGreens NZ: We should accept more Tamils

Newstalk ZB – Greens want more refugees accepted

The Green Party says the Government’s decision to accept 13 Sri Lankan Tamil refugees is a start but it wants the country to take in more displaced people.

The 13 are among 78 Sri Lankan Tamils rescued on the high seas by the Australian Customs ship, Oceanic Viking.

Greens spokesman Keith Locke says New Zealand should have accepted more people from the ship.

“The biggest refugee crisis in our region is the people coming out of Sri Lanka. We can take quite a number of them and I’m sure the local Tamil community would welcome that. Many of them are refugees themselves.”

Mr Locke says hundreds of Tamils fleeing repression in the aftermath of a civil war are desperate to find refuge in this part of the world and New Zealand has plenty of capacity to accept more people from the Oceanic Viking under its annual refugee quota of 750.

20 JanNZ Green MP Keith Locke on Tamil refugees

Press Release (19/01/10) –  Locke welcomes Tamil asylum seeker decision. Keith Locke MP

Green MP Keith Locke has warmly welcomed the Government decision to accept 13 Tamil asylum seekers picked up by the Australian customs boat, Oceanic Viking.

Immigration Minister Dr Jonathan Coleman announced today that New Zealand would accept 13 of the 78 Tamils who have now been formally processed by the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees.

“This is a greatly appreciated humanitarian gesture,” said Mr Locke, the Green Party’s Immigration Spokesperson.

“Hundreds of Tamils, fleeing repression in the aftermath of a civil war, have been desperate to find refuge in this part of the world.

“It is good that we are helping to share Australia’s burden, because the extra distance to New Zealand means that no boat people ever get here.

“It is in the best spirit of Trans-Tasman cooperation for us to help Australia deal with its boat people crisis.

“I am sure it will enhance our country’s reputation, as happened when we assisted Australia by taking 130 Afghan refugees from the Norwegian ship Tampa back in 2001.

“Taking in the 13 Tamils is a great start. However, there is probably room to take more under our annual 750 refugee quota.

“The Tamil refugee situation is one of the most dire in our region, and I’m certain that those coming here will be well supported by the local Tamil community, who understand what their Tamil compatriots have faced,” Mr Locke said. More

15 JanATC in the media

ABC Radio Australia – Australian Tamils concerned at visa denials of Tamil refugees

ABC Radio Australia’s international section interviewed Dr Sam Pari, Official Spokesperson for Australian Tamil Congress on 13/01/2010 about the Australian government’s decision to deny visas to 7 Tamil asylum seekers, found to be legitimate refugees by UNHCR

14 JanASIO wears pants on refugees, not Govt

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Crikey - ASIO, not the government, calling the shots on refugees

by Jeff Sparrow

So ASIO says that five of the unfortunates from the Oceanic Viking constitute a threat to national security.

What have they done? ASIO won’t say. What’s the evidence against them? It’s secret.

It beggars belief that, in the year 2010, ASIO can still behave like this.

After all, there’s plenty of past examples of ASIO’s handiwork available in the national archives: yellowing files permeated with arbitrary and capricious judgements by unaccountable people. For the most part, the dossiers are like student cookery: anything on hand simply got thrown in. More

14 JanATC in the media

ABC TV News – Australian Tamils concerned at visa denials
A spokeswoman from the Australian Tamil community, Dr Sam Pari, says they are concerned that the five refugees who were denied visas to live in Australia will be mistreated by Sri Lankan authorities

14 JanASIO checks unreliable

SMH – ASIO checks unreliable: former immigration officer

ASIO’s security checks are open to political interference and should not form the basis of rejecting refugees from Australia, a former immigration official says.

…’The UN Refugee Agency does not grant refugee status to anyone who has committed war crimes or crimes against humanity. It determined all 78 Sri Lankan Tamils who refused to get off the Oceanic Viking in Indonesia to be refugees.

The Minister for Immigration, Chris Evans, said he did not know what the security concerns surrounding the five Tamils were. The Tamils were not discussed by the border security committee of cabinet, which met in Canberra yesterday.

”Those decisions are made by ASIO and they don’t discuss the detail of those things,” he said.

A refugee lawyer, David Manne, said secrecy was part of the problem. People suspected of being a risk were never told why. ”ASIO gets information but it never puts it to the person,” he said. ”These people are stuck in indefinite detention but it’s impossible to find out what the concerns are.”

The process had to be made transparent and subject to independent scrutiny. ”ASIO has made serious mistakes in the past,” he said. ”It’s crucial that we don’t revert to the previous situation where these people’s plight became a political football.”

ASIO draws on classified and unclassified information to evaluate a person’s activities, associates, attitudes, background and character. The agency takes into account the credibility and reliability of information available, the ASIO annual report says. Where sources contradict, ASIO seeks to interview the person.

According to Ms Steen, repeated interviews, without disclosing the nature of the suspicions, bordered on harassment. ”ASIO got leant on. Its re-interviewing of the two men on Nauru was a result of political interference from the top.” ASIO declined to comment.

ABC Radio AM – Opposition says Oceanic Viking deal compromised national security

SAMANTHA HAWLEY: ASIO never publicly releases its security assessments so it’s not clear what risk the group pose but most commentators believe it’s to do with the Tamil Tigers in Sri Lanka.

ROB STARY: To now arbitrarily say that the Sri Lankan Tamils shouldn’t be here because they’ve sided with one side or the other, I think is extraordinary.

SAMANTHA HAWLEY: Defence lawyer Rob Stary is currently representing members of the Tamil community who’ve been accused of providing financial help to the Tamil Tigers.

That case is before the courts in Melbourne.

ROB STARY: ASIO should not be the final arbiter as to who should represent a security risk. The process should be firstly transparent and it should be open to further scrutiny.

SAMANTHA HAWLEY: We can only guess that these people were linked in some way to the Tamil Tigers?

ROB STARY: Yeah but that’s true of many, many political refugees in this country – the same way that many Kosovars fled the conflict in Serbia. It’s the same as historically the Irish Fenians in the mid 19th century fled Ireland.

SAMANTHA HAWLEY: Doctor Martin Mulligan is from RMIT University.

MARTIN MULLIGAN: Most of the people who have lived in the north-eastern region of Sri Lankan and even in the south-eastern province could easily have had some kind of contact, like linkages to the Tamil Tigers over a period of time and often that was against their will.

SAMANTHA HAWLEY: He believes the Tamil Tigers should no longer be treated as a terrorist organisation.

MARTIN MULLIGAN: We really have to show a little generosity here and understand the past in where these people may have lived in situations where the Tamil Tigers may have been in control of a whole area, territory.

SAMANTHA HAWLEY: Two young children are among the group being detained.

The Greens want the family brought to the Australian mainland.

But the Government says the children and their mother won’t be held behind the razor wire.

It now faces the difficult task of finding a third nation to take the Tamils who can’t be sent back to Sri Lanka because they have been found to be genuine refugees.

13 JanATC in the media

SBS News – ASIO refuses asylum seekers

Click here to watch

ABC World News - Tamil refugees fail security checks

The Australian – ASIO warning ignored for deal on Tamil refugees

A spokeswoman for the Australian Tamil Congress, Sam Pari, said the information underpinning ASIO’s rulings needed to be “seriously questioned”.

“If the details are coming from the Sri Lankan government, well then that is of great concern, because they are who these people are fleeing from in the first place,” Dr Pari said.

The Age – Refugee family faces indefinite detention

…The Australian Tamil Congress said ASIO had to show it had not taken the word of the Sri Lankan Government in forming the assessment…

12 JanTamils in limbo

The Australian – ASIO rejects four Viking Tamils

by Paul Maley

The government lobbied furiously to resettle the 78 Sri Lankans swiftly following their stand-off aboard the Australian Customs boat, but The Australian can reveal that four of the Tamils being held at Christmas Island have been issued with adverse security assessments by Australia’s chief domestic security agency, ASIO.

In a further complication for authorities struggling to manage a fresh wave of boat-borne asylum-seekers, it is believed one of the four is a woman who travelled to Australia in the company of her two young children.

The situation presents a conundrum for the government, which cannot return the four to Sri Lanka without exposing them to potential harm from the Sri Lankan government, which in May crushed the decades-old Tamil insurgency with a comprehensive military offensive. Australia would also be in breach of its legal obligations if it returned the four, as the UN High Commissioner for Refugees has designated all 78 of the Sri Lankans as legal refugees. However, people subject to adverse security assessments are by law ineligible for an Australian visa, which means the four have no hope of coming to the Australian mainland. More

07 JanUpdate on Merak boat

CNN – Exclusive: On board the Tamil asylum boat

They are home movies of a different sort. Children scamper across the wooden deck. Parents lie on woven mats trying to fend off boredom. A handful of men share a single hose as a shower at the back of the boat.

ABC – Tamils not receiving medical help, doctor says

An Australian doctor says he has had to resort to giving medical advice over the phone to asylum seekers on a boat at an Indonesian port.

The Australian (04/01) - Oceanic Viking asylum-seeker stand-off became an international circus

WATCHING the Oceanic Viking debacle from the outside, it must have seemed like nothing so much as an early Christmas pantomime, with Kevin Rudd as the back half of the donkey.

30 DecIs disease spreading on Merak?

ABC – Asylum seeker stand-off continues in Merak

The Indonesian Government is calling on Australia to stick to the spirit of the negotiations over the Oceanic Viking asylum seekers.

Indonesia wants Australia to help out with the resettlement of a further 250 asylum seekers refusing to get off a boat in Merak.

The asylum seekers were brought to the port by the Indonesian navy in October after a call from the Australian Government to assist them. More

The Australian – Twist as Tamil refugees arrive today

SIXTEEN Tamil refugees rescued by the Oceanic Viking will begin arriving in Australia today, six via the Christmas Island detention centre.

Forty of the Sri Lankan Tamils left Indonesia’s Tanjung Pinang detention centre yesterday morning, courtesy of a special deal underwritten by the Rudd government to fast-track their resettlement in exchange for ending their month-long standoff aboard the Customs boat. More

Australia News Network – Asylum seekers test Australia-Indonesia negotiations

FEARS of a disease outbreak are causing tensions to rise among asylum seekers on a boat moored at the Indonesian port of Merak since October.

The 12-week stand-off continues as a further 16 refugees from the Oceanic Viking head to Australia for resettlement.

The Sri Lankan Tamils, including women and children, were among 40 refugees from the Australian customs ship due to fly out of Jakarta last night. More