PNG “mateship” on asylum seekers no substitute for rigorous policy and decent conditions
Tony Abbott was desperate to paint his just-completed trip to Papua
New Guinea in highly positive terms but as far as asylum seeker policy
is concerned, it has just thrown up more problems and questions and
exposed what a shambles the “PNG solution” is.
Where some of the people who come out of the process as genuine
refugees will then go is now one of those “known unknowns”. Whether the
processing itself is being done with sufficient competence and integrity
surely has to be a concern. And both countries appear to care less and
less (if that’s possible) about the human rights of the people on Manus –
their prime preoccupation being to limit information coming out that
might be embarrassing or damaging.
After his Friday talks with Abbott, PNG Prime Minister Peter O'Neill
made it clear his country will not resettle all those found to be
refugees. He wants other Pacific countries to accept some.
“We will take some and we’ll take as much as we can,” he said. “But
as we have stated at the initial stage when we agreed to this, we will
also want all the other countries within the region [to participate].”
This sort of qualification has periodically been thrown up in one
form or another by PNG. But the Australian government has given the
impression that PNG would take the full refugee component.
Abbott, asked on February 17 whether it was still the plan to settle
refugees in PNG as originally conceived under then PM Kevin Rudd, said:
“Well that is still very much available and Prime Minister Peter O'Neill
has reassured me repeatedly that the same deal that was on offer to the
former government remains on offer.”
Immigration Minister Scott Morrison said on February 18: “Mr Abbott
spoke with Prime Minister O'Neill today … [he] confirmed Papua New
Guinea’s ongoing commitment to offshore processing on Manus Island and
resettlement in Papua New Guinea.”
When on March 2 he announced a joint ministerial forum to oversee the
regional resettlement arrangement Morrison said it would “aid us to
keep this important arrangement on track and translate announcements
into action, when it comes to the critical issues of processing claims
and resettling refugees in PNG”.
Abbott was pressed while in PNG on when and how come things had changed - he just avoided answering.
PNG has yet to put its resettlement plan to its parliament – it is
due to do that in May. Abbott said that would mean resettlement of those
found to be refugees ought to be taking place in May and June.
Now that it is beyond doubt that PNG wants to offload some refugees,
where will they go? Is Australia negotiating with other Pacific
countries? “I’m not going to imperil discussions that we’re having,”
Abbott said.
Foreign Minister Julie Bishop did recently sound out the Cambodia
government about asylum seekers but the Australian government was less
forthcoming about these discussions than its Cambodian counterpart and
the nature of these talks was unclear.
O'Neill also declared at Friday’s joint news conference that “a good
majority” of those processed were economic refugees and would be
repatriated.
Abbott later invoked former Labor minister Bob Carr’s assessment
(while in government) to back up what he described as O'Neill’s “strong
suspicion”.
Yet there was not any precision. Is this based on numbers or is this
some generalisation on impressions? And how come this can be said while
people don’t seem to be emerging, processed, out of the system?
While it may be true that the claims of many won’t stack up, given
the maladministration surrounding Manus in general, one has to wonder
how rough and ready the assessment process is (it is being done by PNG
with Australian mentoring).
The shenanigans over the investigation of human rights at Manus by
PNG Justice David Cannings does not give confidence in the behaviour of
either government.
Cannings took journalists when he visited the detention centre late last week, obviously to the annoyance of both governments.
Next thing, his inquiry – which the judge himself had initiated - was shut down by the PNG government.
PNG Foreign Minister Rimbink Pato told Fairfax Media that the Abbott
government was consulted and strongly backed the decision, saying
Morrison and Bishop shared his concern about the inquiry and thought it
should be challenged.
This is perhaps not surprising after the recent statement that other,
more official inquiries the two countries were holding should be
“synthesised”.
But Abbott himself said he did not know about the action ahead of
time and just talked about PNG’s “vigorous and independent” legal
system.
The judge is now opening a new inquiry.
The reporting by the journalists who visited the centre indicated conditions that should be totally unacceptable.
At their joint news conference Abbott said he was gratified to have
from O'Neill his assurance that the people and government of PNG were
committed to “staying the course”.
“I really value the mateship that Peter O'Neill has shown to
Australia on this.” The following day he said: “The co-operation that we
are getting from PNG is a real act of mateship on their part and I’m
really thrilled by it.”
It’s a sort of Orwellian parallel reality: people held in dreadful
conditions, two government conspiring to traduce their rights and
suppress as much information as they can, and no one having the
slightest clue about the future of people who really did flee
persecution – while Abbott declares it’s been “a very successful visit”.
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