Jakarta Globe – AFP, January 10, 2014
Geneva. The UN refugee agency Friday warned that Australia could be breaking international law, amid reports that it pushed back to Indonesia boats carrying asylum-seekers.
Geneva. The UN refugee agency Friday warned that Australia could be breaking international law, amid reports that it pushed back to Indonesia boats carrying asylum-seekers.
Adrian
Edwards, spokesman for the UN high commissioner for refugees, said the agency
wanted an explanation after the reports that the Australian navy forced boats
back, as well as plans to buy more vessels to bolster such operations.
“UNHCR
would be concerned by any policy or practice that involved pushing
asylum-seeker boats back at sea without a proper consideration of individual
needs for protection,” Edwards told reporters, saying it was still seeking
details from the government.
“Any such
approach would raise significant issues and potentially place Australia in
breach of its obligations under the 1951 Refugee Convention and other
international law obligations,” he added.
Australia’s
conservative Prime Minister Tony Abbott, who won power in September after
campaigning to “stop the boats”, has introduced the military-led Operation
Sovereign Borders to crack down on asylum-seekers coming by boat.
Indonesia
says Australia has turned back at least one boat carrying asylum-seekers to its
shores, although The Australian newspaper said as many as five have been
secretly returned.
“As past
experience has shown, such practices are operationally difficult and
potentially dangerous for all concerned,” Edwards said.
On Friday,
Abbott likened the fight against people-smugglers to war. The government has
declined to reveal details of the boat incidents.
It has also
refused to confirm or deny that it is planning to buy 16 hard-hulled lifeboats
to ferry asylum-seekers to Indonesia.
Australia’s
tough policies have irked Jakarta, which has warned that turning boats back
could breach Indonesian sovereignty, feeding into existing diplomatic spats.
Over the
past decade, UNHCR has repeatedly crossed swords with Australian governments of
all political stripes, including Abbott’s Labor Party predecessors who also
backed tough measures.
Australia
argues that is on the front line of a wave of illegal immigration and needs to
step up the fight against people-smugglers who try to bring people in, often on
unseaworthy wooden vessels heading from Indonesia.
It insists
that tough measures are needed to discourage illegal immigrants, and that
genuine asylum-seekers get a fair hearing.
Australia’s
policy of sending arrivals to Papua New Guinea and Nauru pending asylum
hearings has faced criticism from UNHCR and rights groups over conditions in
camps there and the lengthy process, but like previous administrations, Abbot
defended it.


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