Remembering why I don't read the local news...

Categories: australia, news-documentaries, immigration

Date: 09 April 2010 05:22:58

Been a but busy of late so I haven't caught as much local news as I usually do lately; still listen to the BBC World Service and other programs via ABC News Radio though.

And what is the first news article I read while taking a break from work?

Rule changes leave asylum seekers in limbo

All new asylum seeker claims from Sri Lanka and Afghanistan are being suspended, as news emerges that 70 people were rescued from a sinking asylum boat off Christmas Island early this morning.

Immigration Minister Chris Evans says the Government has decided to implement the processing suspension due to "changing conditions" in both countries.

New applications from Sri Lanka will be suspended for three months, while those from Afghanistan will be suspended for six months.

The Government will review whether the suspensions need to be extended at the end of those periods.

...

crikey provides some analysis; here is their editorial [the first link]:

There are two population debates going on in Australia.

The first is the public debate that has inundated the media in recent weeks; all about forecasts, sustainability, infrastructure, economics, demographics and really serious-sounding matters.

The second is the subterranean debate that's rarely discussed in public because it contains two unpalatable truths that require ... oxymoron coming ... really careful handing by politicians and media.

Unpalatable Truth #1: The majority of Australians are opposed to meaningful population growth, dislike the idea of high levels of immigration and want political refugees refused entry. These unfortunate attitudes are supported in poll after poll -- this one and this one in recent days and weeks.

Unpalatable Truth #2: There is private acknowledgement among government and strategic decision-makers that Australia has a moral responsibility, as the richest and most underpopulated nation in the Asian region, to be seen to be growing its population and assuming its share of humanitarian migration. This is partly because of the terrible optics of a fortress Australia approach, and partly because such an approach is so out of sync with population trends in our region that it could generate enough resentment among our neighbours to present a serious security risk to Australia.

Of course our political leaders are aware of these unpalatable truths, and talk about them privately. But they also know they are dynamite issues that, if raised in public, need to be handled with care so that they don't incite the wrong kind of populist debate that wedges politicians into make the wrong kinds of decisions for Australia's long-term interests.

The unnerving part of where we are now is not the existence of the unpalatable truths. It's the spectre, six months or so from a federal election, of the growing temptation on one side of politics to deploy the dog whistle for a purely electoral dividend.


I do understand it is a complicated issue, and I'm sure there's an element of damned if you do; damned if you don't but I had expected better things from this government.

I think I'll stick to the BBC World Service [though this may make it there]...local news is just so depressing; anything for votes...

Lord, have mercy.