News

|

National Security

They won't be staying

April 8, 2024

Monday 08 April 2024
Jessica Wang And Eleanor Campbell
Gold Coast Bulletin


 Border policy firm despite third WA boat arrival, PM says
 
 Anthony Albanese says he has sent a "very clear message" that  illegal boat arrivals will not be accepted into Australia after a group of  asylum seekers were discovered in a remote part of WA.
 
 Police have now apprehended a man who became separated from a group of 15  people who were found at the remote Mungalalu Truscott Airbase in the far  north Kimberley Region on Friday afternoon.
 
 Questioned over border security concerns, the Prime Minister argued there  would be no changes made to the nation's approach to border protection in  response to the latest arrival.
 
 "We have a very large coastline," Mr Albanese said on Sunday.  "What is clear, though, is that people who are unauthorised arrivals  will not be settled in Australia.
 
 "Operation Sovereign Borders principles will apply as they have been in  this case." The boat arrival is understood to be the third illegal  maritime landing on Australian soil since November.
 
 A plane carrying the rest of the group to an offshore detention centre in  Nauru departed RAAF Curtin base in Western Australia on Sunday morning,  according to reports from The Australian.
 
 Opposition home affairs spokesman James Paterson described the situation as a  "failure" and claimed the arrival would incentivise people  smugglers to attempt to enter Australia.
 
 "Aerial surveillance hours under this government's watch have dropped 20  per cent, maritime patrol days have dropped 12 per cent, and the result of  that is people are getting through, they are getting onshore, and our border  protection regime is being undermined," he said.
 
 "It's no surprise that people smugglers are testing their (the  government's) will." Reports of the arrival have not been confirmed by  either Home Affairs Minister Clare O'Neil or by the Australian Border Force,  as per standard practice.
 
 "The Australian Border Force does not confirm or comment on operational  matters," an ABF spokesman said.
 
 A spokesman for Home Affairs Minister Clare O'Neil did not give further  details.
 
 "As a longstanding practice we do not comment on operational  matters," they said.
 
 In February, a boat carrying two groups of 39 Pakistan and Bangladesh foreign  nationals was found on the Dampier Peninsula north of Broome, which followed  a group of 12 reaching the Mungalulu Truscott Airbase in November.

Recent News

All Posts