News

|

Community Safety

'Full Gazan blockade' :Dutton call

August 15, 2024

Thursday 15 August 2024
Ben Packham and Rosie Lewis
The Australian

Peter Dutton has escalated the domestic political contest over war in Gaza, calling for an  outright ban on arrivals from the conflict zone in a captain's call branded  as "racist" by Muslim groups.
 
 The Opposition Leader announced the new position in a television interview  without consulting the shadow cabinet, just a day after 79 Coalition MPs  called for Hamas supporters be denied visas rather than all Gazans.
 
 The move, condemned by Labor and the Greens, came as Home Affairs Minister  Tony Burke scrambled to come up with a visa solution for more than 1300  Gazans already in Australia whose visitor permits are due to expire in coming  weeks.
 
 A leading pollster said Mr Dutton's policy call would deepen the divide  between the major parties in the eyes of Muslim voters, benefiting Labor in  key western Sydney seats to be targeted by pro- Palestine independents.
 
 Updated figures reveal nearly 3000 visas have been granted to Gazans since  the October 7 attacks on Israel, but more than 7100 applications from Gaza  residents have been rejected.
 
 Mr Burke vowed there would be "no compromise on national security",  but confirmed that faceto-face interviews were unable to be conducted with  visa applicants in Gaza while Israel's war against Hamas continued.
 
 He said ASIO checked applications against an international security watchlist  that was updated every 24 hours, but declined to say how many had been  rejected on national security grounds.
 
 "There is a process which ASIO is involved with, which applies to every  single visa; whether you come from the United States or whether you come from  the Gaza Strip," Mr Burke said.
 
 The opposition had attacked the government for refusing to say whether it  would allow Hamas sympathisers to settle in Australia, after ASIO  directorgeneral Mike Burgess said "rhetorical support" for the  listed terrorist group was not a problem for Palestinians seeking visas.
 
 Mr Dutton went a step further on Wednesday morning, telling Sky News: "I  don't think people should be coming in from that war zone at all at the  moment. It's not prudent to do so, and I think it puts our national security  at risk."
 
 Anthony Albanese said the Opposition Leader was "looking to divide"  the nation, and his position was inconsistent with the Coalition's past  acceptance of refugees from conflicts in Afghanistan and Syria.
 
 The Prime Minister declined to say whether an individual who supported a  listed terrorist organisation such as Hamas would pass Australia's character  test. But Mr Albanese, who lifted the terrorism threat level to  "probable" less than a fortnight ago, said "exactly the same  system" was in place to vet visa applicants today as when Mr Dutton was  in government.
 
 "If the Leader of the Opposition doesn't have confidence in that system,  he should say so," the Prime Minister said.
 
 He pointed Mr Dutton to Mr Burgess's recent warning that "inflamed  language" was ramping up the threat of terrorism.
 
 Opposition home affairs spokesman James Paterson said Australians should be  alarmed at the lack of assurances by the government over the effectiveness of  its "rushed Gaza visa process".
 
 "This is a war zone controlled by a terrorist organisation with no  Australian officials on the ground to conduct interviews or biometric  tests," Senator Paterson Continued on Page 2 'Full blockade': Dutton's  call on Gazans said. "And yet they've granted almost 3000 visas in an  average time of 24 hours and some as quickly as one hour. That's reckless,  especially after we've just raised the terrorism threat level, are grappling  with an anti-Semitism crisis, and dealing with strained social  cohesion."
 
 Greens home affairs spokesman David Shoebridge said Mr Dutton's new position  was "nothing short of despicable".
 
 "It shows the depths to which the Coalition has sunk in what is  increasingly looking like a revolting, divisive approach ... to demonise  people who are only trying to flee from a genocide," Senator Shoebridge  said.
 
 The Australian National Imams Council's legal affairs adviser, Bilal Rauf,  said Mr Dutton's policy call was "racism at its finest", and in  line with the Opposition Leader's past declaration that it had been a mistake  to settle Lebanese Muslims in Australia during the 1970s.
 
 The Australia Palestine Advocacy Network also condemned Mr Dutton, accusing  him of "stoking racist stereotypes, under the guise of national  security".
 
 The Australia/Israel and Jewish Affairs Council stopped short of backing Mr Dutton's proposed ban on Gazans, but said  it was concerned at the potential for supporters of Hamas and other terrorist  groups to enter Australia as refugees from the conflict.
 
 "While we understand and support the need to help Palestinian  civilians affected by the war Hamas launched on October 7, it's also  important to remember that opinion polls of Gaza residents show a significant  majority not only support Hamas, but also its actions on that day," said  AJIAC executive director Colin Rubenstein.
 
 Political pollster Kos Samaras said the Opposition Leader's policy call had  created a "really stark choice" between the major parties that  meant Labor was "in a better space" in its appeal to Muslim voters.  He said it would particularly help Mr Burke and fellow cabinet minister Jason  Clare, who had faced pressure from Muslim communities in their electorates  since October 7.
 
 "Both (major parties) are looked upon by the Muslim community as bad and  terrible. Labor is the lesser of two evils," said the RedBridge Group's  director of strategy and analytics.
 
 "This is clearly Dutton's play to appeal to certain outersuburban  electorates in outerwestern Sydney, possibly seats like Blair (in  Queensland).
 
 They're largely monocultural ... seats he's going after. Regional electorates  as well. The contrast is stark now you either have a complete ban on  Palestinian refugees or a humanitarian approach to them. Labor will be fairly  sympathetic towards Palestinian refugees so (in Muslim seats) you either vote  for an independent or a Labor candidate."
 
 Senior Coalition MPs said Mr Dutton's policy shift was not flagged with the  shadow cabinet before it was made public, but argued it was a "natural  evolution" of the party's position in recent days. In a letter to Mr  Burke on Tuesday, almost all of the Coalition's MPs and senators expressed  alarm at Mr Burgess's statement on Sunday that Hamas supporters could be  granted visas as long as they were not supporters of "violent  extremism".
 
 "We are gravely concerned that this statement of government policy  signals a relaxed approach to the safety of Australians," they said.

Recent News

All Posts