An Indonesian boat filled with illegal Bengali-Muslims from Burma-Bangladesh Border approaching Christmas Island in Australia. |
Immigration Minister Scott Morrison last night said the people in community detention or in detention centres had failed in their claims - some multiple times including judicial reviews - and had no right to be in Australia any more.
More than 30,000 asylum seekers are living on the Australian mainland after the masses of boat arrivals under the previous Labor government - residing in community detention and receiving welfare benefits paid for by taxpayers or in detention centres at a cost to taxpayers.
Mr Morrison said more than 1000 of these people had been "sitting in the network and in the community after having their claims rejected".
"The government will take the steps necessary to remove failed asylum seekers from Australia who wish to stay indefinitely at taxpayers' expense," he said.
"Once you have had your asylum claims assessed and rejected not just by the department but also on appeal, it's time to go home, as you have been assessed as not being owed protection. If people want to frustrate it and act up and frustrate we have the ability to take them into detention. We make no apologies to return people who shouldn't be here and particularly those who have come the wrong way."
But Mr Morrison stressed that those who co-operated with the department would be given time - the length to be judged on a case-by-case basis - to make arrangements to return to their home country voluntarily.
Australian Immigration Minister Scot Morrison. |
His comments came after the Asylum Seeker Resource Centre last night took to social media to claim people having their claims assessed would be locked up "in an unprecedented attack on the rule of law, human rights and how legal system".
"Scott Morrison to start the mass round up of asylum seekers in the community for detention and possible deportation," the group said on Face book.
"If they fail to leave after 6 weeks they will be detained and face the risk of deportation. This despite the fact they are exercising their legal right to appeal and have a legitimate case on foot or their exercising their right to have the minister consider their humanitarian claims."
But Mr Morrison rejected any suggestions people would be forced to abandon their appeals. "Where failed asylum seekers have sought judicial review of their decisions, those matters will take their course in the courts," he said.
"Detention of people involved in ongoing cases is decided on a case by case basis. Their detention does not impact on the progress of their case. Any suggestion that anyone is being forced to abandon their appeals is nonsense."
"For those who have been through
the process, the government has every right to take the next step to proceed
toward their removal."
No Muslim-Boat arrival in Australia this January. |
Iranian Islamists' notorious PRESS TV's condescending take on Australia's
new zero-tolerance policy on illegal Boat-Muslims.