ID :
88890
Tue, 11/10/2009 - 17:12
Auther :
Shortlink :
http://m.oananews.org//node/88890
The shortlink copeid
Tamils yet to accept Indonesian solution
The federal government insists the asylum seekers aboard the Oceanic Viking will go
ashore in Indonesia, despite making no apparent progress on the impasse just days
before a fresh deadline.
The 78 Sri Lankans are still refusing to leave the Australian customs ship, which
has now been anchored off the Indonesian island of Bintan for more than two weeks.
The ship rescued the ethnic Tamils, who were trying to reach Christmas Island, in
international waters inside Indonesia's search and rescue zone last month.
Acting Prime Minister Julia Gillard on Tuesday said the government was "patiently
and methodically" working to convince the Sri Lankans to leave the ship.
"We made an agreement with Indonesia that we would disembark the people rescued at
sea in Indonesia. We are still committed to that course," Ms Gillard told Sky News.
Indonesia has warned it will not give the Oceanic Viking another extension once its
security clearance expires on Friday, leaving Australian officials with just three
more days to break the deadlock.
Australia has reportedly offered the asylum seekers a deal that would see them leave
the ship and enter community housing on Bintan while they wait for fast-tracked
resettlement.
But Indonesia has said it would only accept the Tamils if they all agreed to enter a
local detention centre.
The Australian Greens said that would ensure that children were put behind bars and
razor wire.
"(Prime Minister Kevin) Rudd shouldn't be waiting for people to self-harm. He can
make a difference today by bringing the Oceanic Viking to Australia," said Greens
senator Sarah Hanson-Young.
During a visit to the Sri Lankan capital Colombo, Foreign Minister Stephen Smith and
his counterpart Rohitha Bogollagama vowed to work together to improve conditions in
Sri Lanka so people would not feel the need to seek refuge in Australia.
"Our two countries will actively work for the reconstruction and rehabilitation of
Sri Lanka's northern and eastern provinces, to facilitate the return of displaced
civilians to their homes in conditions of dignity, peace and freedom," the ministers
said in a joint statement after their meeting.
"Australia, therefore, pledges to strongly support the resettlement and
reconstruction programs being led by the Sri Lankan government."
The two countries also signed a memorandum of understanding to strengthen legal
cooperation against people smuggling.
Some 274,000 people were displaced during the Sri Lankan civil war and following
recent returns, 163,000 people remain in state-run camps where conditions are said
to be deteriorating.
Nationals senator Barnaby Joyce has called for the Oceanic Viking to return the
asylum seekers to Sri Lanka.
But in a later interview on the Nine Network's A Current Affair program, Mr Smith
said the government had no intention of doing so.
"We're certainly not proposing to return them to Sri Lanka. They are, effectively,
asylum seekers and if we returned them to Sri Lanka prior to assessment that would
be in breach of our international legal obligations and almost certainly in breach
of the refugee convention," he said.
"So, we continue to work with the people on the boat and Indonesia to get them
calmly and peacefully off the boat for processing."
ashore in Indonesia, despite making no apparent progress on the impasse just days
before a fresh deadline.
The 78 Sri Lankans are still refusing to leave the Australian customs ship, which
has now been anchored off the Indonesian island of Bintan for more than two weeks.
The ship rescued the ethnic Tamils, who were trying to reach Christmas Island, in
international waters inside Indonesia's search and rescue zone last month.
Acting Prime Minister Julia Gillard on Tuesday said the government was "patiently
and methodically" working to convince the Sri Lankans to leave the ship.
"We made an agreement with Indonesia that we would disembark the people rescued at
sea in Indonesia. We are still committed to that course," Ms Gillard told Sky News.
Indonesia has warned it will not give the Oceanic Viking another extension once its
security clearance expires on Friday, leaving Australian officials with just three
more days to break the deadlock.
Australia has reportedly offered the asylum seekers a deal that would see them leave
the ship and enter community housing on Bintan while they wait for fast-tracked
resettlement.
But Indonesia has said it would only accept the Tamils if they all agreed to enter a
local detention centre.
The Australian Greens said that would ensure that children were put behind bars and
razor wire.
"(Prime Minister Kevin) Rudd shouldn't be waiting for people to self-harm. He can
make a difference today by bringing the Oceanic Viking to Australia," said Greens
senator Sarah Hanson-Young.
During a visit to the Sri Lankan capital Colombo, Foreign Minister Stephen Smith and
his counterpart Rohitha Bogollagama vowed to work together to improve conditions in
Sri Lanka so people would not feel the need to seek refuge in Australia.
"Our two countries will actively work for the reconstruction and rehabilitation of
Sri Lanka's northern and eastern provinces, to facilitate the return of displaced
civilians to their homes in conditions of dignity, peace and freedom," the ministers
said in a joint statement after their meeting.
"Australia, therefore, pledges to strongly support the resettlement and
reconstruction programs being led by the Sri Lankan government."
The two countries also signed a memorandum of understanding to strengthen legal
cooperation against people smuggling.
Some 274,000 people were displaced during the Sri Lankan civil war and following
recent returns, 163,000 people remain in state-run camps where conditions are said
to be deteriorating.
Nationals senator Barnaby Joyce has called for the Oceanic Viking to return the
asylum seekers to Sri Lanka.
But in a later interview on the Nine Network's A Current Affair program, Mr Smith
said the government had no intention of doing so.
"We're certainly not proposing to return them to Sri Lanka. They are, effectively,
asylum seekers and if we returned them to Sri Lanka prior to assessment that would
be in breach of our international legal obligations and almost certainly in breach
of the refugee convention," he said.
"So, we continue to work with the people on the boat and Indonesia to get them
calmly and peacefully off the boat for processing."