A nine year obscenity: The Australia-NZ resettlement deal

April 5, 2022
Issue 
Sydney protest for refugees on March 20. Photo: Zebedee Parkes

One of the Australian government鈥檚 most pronounced and undeniable obscenities is its continuing effort to gut and empty international refugee law of its relevant foundations. Instead of being treated as a scandal, populists the world over have expressed admiration, even envy: If they can get away with that, what might we do?

Australia has also made its greatest contribution to deterring unwanted arrivals, creating the most ruthless, tropical detention network for individuals who, unblessed by paperwork, arrive by boat with the aid of people traffickers and are duly told they will never settle in Australia.

These 鈥渦nlawful鈥 arrivals 鈥 the language itself is in contravention of the United Nations Refugee Convention 鈥 are duly passed on the refugee camp conveyor belt, where they face ruination, despair and sadistic prison wardens. To Manus Island or Nauru they go, awaiting settlement in another country.

New Zealand in 2013 offered some mitigation to these ghastly conditions. Australia expressed no interest in resettling such arrivals: that great tradition of outsourcing obligations and responsibilities continued.

The agreement involved NZ accepting 150 of its annual intake of refugees from Australian detention centres. But the coming to power of a conservative Coalition, crazed by 鈥渢urning back the boats鈥, all but killed the arrangement.

This did not stop other inglorious attempts, on Canberra鈥檚 part, to abdicate human rights responsibilities with the connivance of other countries. A resettlement deal with Cambodia in 2014 costing in the order of $55 million.聽 Unsurprisingly, only a few refugees availed themselves of this less-than-impressive arrangement. The next year, Australia , in vain, to coax the Philippines with an offer worth $150 million.

The 2016 agreement with the United States, hammered out in the last days of the Barack Obama administration, was seen as a diplomatic coup. It obliged Washington to take between 1250鈥2000 refugees, all of whom would be subject to US vetting.聽 Australia, in turn, would accept a much smaller complement of refugees from Central America.

The arrangements were rubbished by the new President Donald Trump: in a now between Trump and Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull, the President suggested that this 鈥渟tupid deal鈥 might help terrorists enter the US.

In another ingratiating action, Australia agreed 17 Cubans, who were found clinging to a lighthouse off the Florida Keys in 2017.

The pattern should be obvious: Australia will do everything it can to evade, circumvent and subvert a refugee processing scheme that is humane and generous.

Under the current, revived understanding, NZ will accept 150 refugees from Australia each year for three years, but only those who are already in detention. Canberra has made it clear that the deal will not apply to those subsequently making an effort to travel here by sea. 鈥淎ustralia remains firm,鈥 Home Affairs Minister Karen Andrews, adding, 鈥渋llegal maritime arrivals will not settle here permanently. Anyone who attempts to breach our borders will be turned back or sent to Nauru.鈥

There is another nasty proviso: those refugees resettled in NZ will be able to reside in Australia. The Australian Department of Home Affairs said 鈥渢o apply for visas to enter Australia on a short-term or temporary stay basis only鈥. This would also apply even after being granted NZ citizenship.

Acceptance was only reached after what as 鈥渂ullish鈥 and 鈥渋ntimidating鈥 negotiations between Prime Minister Scott Morrison and non-government parliamentarians in 2019. Independent Tasmanian Senator Jacqui Lambie that she was threatened with jail were she to reveal any details of the plan. 鈥淪o, for the sake of humanity, I had no other choice but to shut up anyway to make sure that job was done.鈥

Lambie鈥檚 humanity should not be exaggerated. Negotiations with the government centred on securing her support to permitting the evacuation of gravely ill refugees to the Australian mainland for medical treatment.

The Labor Party, with refugee policies which hardly differ to the Coalition鈥檚, has tried to make hay from the government鈥檚 change. 鈥淭his is an absolutely humiliating backflip,鈥 said Andrew Giles, the Shadow Assistant Minister for Immigration. 鈥淚t should not have taken nine years and that is the other big thought in my mind, the cost to those individual lives and the cost to all of us in this pointless, cruel intransigence by Mr Morrison.鈥

While Labor mocked, NZ Immigration Minister Kris Faafoi about his country鈥檚 record. 鈥淣ew Zealand has a long and proud history of refugee resettlement and this arrangement is another example of how we are fulfilling our humanitarian international commitment.鈥 In marketing speak, Faafoi was pleased NZ could 鈥減rovide resettlement outcomes for refugees who would otherwise have continued to face uncertain futures鈥.

While 450 refugees will find safety in NZ, that does little for 500 others. The cruel system remains in place, and is said to $2 billion next year. If anything, this revived agreement shows how far countries have pitifully fallen in their responsibilities in providing safety for the vulnerable and damaged.

[Binoy Kampmark lectures at RMIT University.]

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