Three more Sri Lankan 'refugees' rounded-up in Australia
Three more Sri Lankan refugees who fled the country's bloody civil
war have been rounded up across Australia in the past week having been
branded a security threat by intelligence agencies.
Two men were taken into custody in Melbourne and Sydney while a woman
was detained in Perth.
None are allowed to know the reasons the Australian Security and
Intelligence Organisation has labelled them a threat to national
security nor to appeal the assessment.
The latest cases come as the High Court prepares to hear a challenge
to the ASIO assessment regime on June 18, brought by the same legal team
that scuttled the government's planned people-swap deal with Malaysia.
The legal challenge is compounding Labour's difficulties in the
politics swirling around border protection after reports this week that
a people smuggler fooled immigration authorities by claiming refugee
status and set up criminal operations in Australia.
Yesterday, Immigration Minister Chris Bowen's office confirmed that
the man, known as ''Captain Emad'', still holds a valid Australian visa,
despite fleeing the country on Tuesday night 24 hours after ABC's Four
Corners alleged he was a people smuggling kingpin.
The opposition fuelled the political storm, saying Mr Bowen should
have known about a two-year federal police investigation into Captain
Emad before the allegations were aired on television.
Police said they could not prevent Captain Emad departing Australia
as there was insufficient evidence to lay charges.
The government is refusing to say when, or if, it was told police
suspected Captain Emad had lied about being a refugee and was
fraudulently living in Canberra in taxpayer-funded housing.
The three blacklist refugees join 51 others now held in indefinite
detention - recognised to be too much at risk to return home but not
permitted a visa for release into Australia.
The woman, believed to be in her early 30s, fainted after being told
on Thursday that ASIO had put her on a blacklist and had to be taken to
hospital.
She had been living in Perth since late last year after being
released from detention, but is expected to be eventually transferred to
a Sydney detention centre.
The government has been rebuffed by the United States and Britain in
attempts to send some of the refugees to join family overseas.
Adverse assessments are given to fewer than 1 per cent of all asylum
cases but the issue is a growing headache for Labour, with the surge in
people seeking refugee status in recent years increasing the number of
people trapped in what one MP has dubbed a "legal blackhole".
Backbenchers are agitating for a review mechanism for the ASIO
findings, in line with a pledge made at the ALP national conference in
December. But the government has so far failed to change the rules. -
BrisbaneTimes
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