Tony Abbott has correctly pointed out that under his
new government the reduction in the number of asylum seekers taking the
dangerous journey between Indonesia and Christmas Island has dropped by “almost
90%.” Already over 600 people, seeking asylum in Australia, have been stopped
by Indonesian authorities giving the PM plenty of scope to claim a major coupe
in his goal of ‘stopping the boats’. So has the problem been solved? Or have we simply
pushed back the problem to Indonesia? Before we address this question it is worth looking
at why there has been such a significant reduction in the number of boat
arrivals over the past month:
Firstly, some credit must go to Kevin Rudd and his
Manus and Nauru solution. Manus Island in particular has produced the desired
result of providing a significant disincentive for asylum seekers wanting a new
life in Australia. Secondly, Tony Abbott’s rhetoric in opposition
certainly frightened the people smugglers once the Coalition was elected.
Abbott’s threat to ‘take the sugar off the table’ has caused many asylum
seekers to re-think their plans to travel on old boats to AustraliaThirdly, the PM’s recent visit to Indonesia and meeting with President Yudhoyono was successful, culminating with Mr Abbott’s mea-culpa in admitting that Australia’s handling of the people smuggling issue, including buying Indonesian fishing boats and paying-off village wardens to dob-in smugglers, was probably not very clever. It also did represent a potential breach of Indonesian sovereignty as claimed by Indonesia’s foreign minister Dr Natalegawa, but more importantly it represented excellent ammunition for opposition parties in Indonesia in which to attack the Yudhoyono government for kow-towing to the big neighbour to the south.
The re-building of relationships with Indonesia has
also opened the door for the Indonesian National Police and the Australian
Federal Police to work together to stop the boats. There should be no doubt
that with politics out of the limelight these two organisations can achieve a
great deal. They devastated one of the region’s most feared terrorist groups, Jemaah
Islamiyah (JI) who was responsible
for the Bali bombings, and numerous other terror cells in Indonesia. If these
two police forces can dismantle a terror group such as JI, we should expect that there is much they can do to stop the
people smuggling industry in Java; and we are now starting to see the results of
the co-operation and goodwill that has been developed over ten years.
Indonesia has also helped by cancelling the option
for Iranian nationals to obtain a ‘visa-on-arrival’ at Indonesian airports.
This was being used by many Iranians to transit through Indonesia with ease on
their way to Australia as ‘economic migrants’. The drop in boat arrivals has
achieved another major objective of the Abbott Government: To take the asylum
seeker issue out of the headlines. And if the recent coverage by our media
outlets is any indication, the objective is working. Australians are tired of
the issue and just want it solved. But has it actually been ‘solved’, or just pushed
back to Indonesia, thanks to President Yudhoyono’s co-operation and goodwill?
There is no doubt if Australia stops the boats
coming to our country, then in the longer term Jakarta will also benefit as
people will stop coming to Indonesia. Asylum seekers are in Indonesia for only
one reason: as a transit point to Australia. Whilst Indonesia is now being far
more co-operative and supportive of Mr Abbott’s hard line policy, there are however,
a number of senior officials in Jakarta who feel that Australia’s prime
minister gained enormous political capital at the expense of President
Yudhoyono’s standing within Indonesian domestic politics. They also believe
this will result in Australians seeing the asylum seeker ‘problem’ as being now
solved, rather than just being driven back to Indonesia to deal with.
The challenge for Indonesia in the short to medium
term therefore, is to know what to do with the thousands of displaced people
who are now stuck with simply nowhere to go. This will become a major problem
for Indonesia very quickly and Australia needs to be assisting our neighbour to
demonstrate our ongoing commitment to resolving the broader regional asylum
seeker issue. One effective way to do this would be to increase our intake of
genuine refugees from the current level of 20,000 per year to say, 35,000. We could
easily accommodate this increase, particularly as Australia’s baby-boomers age.
The additional intake could come from the people
currently in Indonesia or Malaysia. Providing people are found to be genuine
refugees there is no reason why the process could not be fast-tracked, giving a
major incentive to asylum seekers to use the formal (legal) channel for their
desired journey to Australia. Such action would significantly reduce the
pressure on Indonesia and would be a politically smart move by Australia, given
that within 12 months Indonesia will have a new government with a new president
who will, most likely, be far more nationalistic and less warm to the idea of helping
solve what most Indonesians see as an Australian-made problem. The sooner we
act to support Indonesia by helping genuine refugees the greater the chance of
Mr Abbott’s ‘stop-the-boats’ policy being embraced by the incoming president in
2014.
Ross Taylor AM is the chairman of
the WA-based Indonesia Institute (Inc).
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