Labor split on migration laws

April 12, 2024

Friday 12 April 2024
Rhiannon Down
The Australian


 The Labor for Refugees group has criticised the Albanese government's  emergency migration laws, arguing provisions enshrining mandatory prison  terms and undermining protections breach the ALP national platform, revealing  a deepening divide within the party.
 
 The party-affiliated group's NSW/ACT branch warned that the legislation which  will give the immigration minister powers to force non-citizens to leave the  country and bar arrivals from entire nations was "flawed" and  called on MPs to oppose the bill.
 
 The group argued that minimum jail sentences of one year and a maximum of  five for noncitizens who don't follow government orders to return home defied  a clause in the national platform that opposed mandatory sentencing.
 
 It also cautioned that by extending the immigration minister's "god  powers", the legislation would undermine a pillar of the national  platform declaring that protection visa claims should be "underpinned by  robust, efficient and transparent processes".
 
 The submission to a Senate inquiry into the legislation, authored by Labor  for Refugees secretary Nizza Siano, questioned whether the legislation  reflected the "highly successful welcoming multicultural country the PM  says we are".
 
 "The Foreign Minister has said that the powers given to the minister  will not be used very often and when they are, will be used wisely," the  submission says. "But not all ministers for immigration are kind and  wise; some are the opposite. Governments change also. Social panics with  strong racist goals can create political imperatives to issue directions to  non-citizens to co-operate for all the wrong reasons." Ms Siano also  argued that by placing a blanket ban on entire countries that refused to  accept the return of their citizens, dubbed "removal concern  countries", undermined clauses in the national platform supporting  family reunions for migrants and refugees.
 
 Immigration Minister Andrew Giles and Home Affairs Minister Clare O'Neil  announced the legislation last month after a landmark High Court ruling,  known as NZYQ, triggered the release of 152 non-citizens, including some with  criminal histories. More than 100 detainees who the government wants to  deport could be released if an Iranian man, ASF17, wins a separate legal  challenge to be heard next week.
 
 Opposition home affairs spokesman James Paterson said that even Labor members  were "unconvinced" about the bill, urging the government to allow  the inquiry to run its course as the Coalition weighs possible amendments.  "The Albanese government should let the parliament do its work and  carefully consider the legislation and any necessary amendments," he  said.
 
 Greens immigration spokesman David Shoebridge on Thursday accused the  government of failing to consult with multicultural communities who fear  being cut off from their families overseas. "(These communities) have  been blindsided by the federal Labor government's proposal to create yet more  cruelty in the immigration and refugee system," he said.
 
 International Commissioner of Jurists president Nicholas Cowdery criticised  the migration laws, warning that the provisions that allow the government to  force non-citizens to leave the country were "unacceptable and a denial  of human rights".
 
 'Not all ministers for immigration are kind and wise; some are the opposite'

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