Soren wrote on Nov 12
th, 2009 at 7:31pm:
Coming by boat is not a separat migration category.Whoever comes by boat and is accepted takes one of the places of the annual refugee intake quota. When that number is reached (more or less), the shop is closed, so to speak, for the year.
Sounds simple, doesn't it? It's what most western countries with shared borders do. It's what America does with its refugees (and they get a ton).
But there's the issue of the "queue". It isn't that the government doesn't want refugees (they are signatories to the UN treaty, after all). It's that they only want appropriately "processed" refugees from UN refugee camps: the queue.
The refugees who arrived on boats during the Howard years were labelled "queue jumpers" and put in detention. So it's not that they have the right to come here and we have the right to reject them: they come here and, if they claim asylum, we put them in jail.
And once we let them go, DIMIA gave them a bill for a few hundred thousand. A nice goodbye. I don't know if anyone actually paid this off - that wasn't the point.
The point was to subjugate and humiliate asylum seekers to deter future arrivals. The "tough" part of the policy that, thankfully, Labor did away with (but that the Libs voted to keep).
The REAL illegal immigrants are the people who overstay their visas. These figures are quite easy to work out, but I've never seen them published. Why? Because it makes a mockery of the whole debate. There must be ten to twenty times the number of real "illegals" that came in on planes to people who come in on boats.
I remember when the Hawke Government gave an amnesty to Chinese students, many living on expired visas in Australia at the time of Tienanmien Square. Tens, if not, hundreds of thousands of people were given asylum overnight. This could never happen today - it was tough back then, too. Hawke almost backflipped, but he rode out the flack.
What seems to be true from reading the above posts is that Australians deeply fear being swamped by boat people - Asian and middle eastern boat people. But if you look at the actual figures (and yes, I know they're prone to manipulation) you'll see that the number is miniscule.
There is really nothing to worry about.
Every new boat that the media find out about gets reported as if it's a major national crisis, but it's just a few desperate families on a leaky boat - why not just assess them on the mainland and accept them into our refugee intake?
This, of course, was the solution the Rudd government came up with in pulling back the whole "Pacific solution". Now look what's happened. The one thing the Labor government didn't count on, I'm guessing, was the reaction of the media and the irrational fear of the Australian people - many of whom, like my father, were boat people themselves.
The politics of Howard, Ruddock, Reith, and the top-down lies of refugee parents throwing their children into the sea are now history. But the nerve they tapped is still - clearly - a part of our political culture.
Therefore, the point isn't about drawing a line - we already have one of these. It's about managing the politics of the debate. So I'll throw the question to you: how do you do this?