Australia’s immigration minister brought border security and immigration to the centre of the 2016 election campaign, warning that resettling “illiterate and innumerate” refugees would strain the social safety network and take Australian jobs.
Border security and immigration are hot political issues in Australia that have swayed past elections and resulted in a bipartisan policy under which asylum seekers arriving by boat are sent to South Pacific island detention camps in tiny Nauru and Papua New Guinea and are deemed ineligible for resettlement.
The number of refugees attempting to reach Australia pales in comparison to those flooding into Europe from the Middle East, and the United Nations has criticised its detention camps.
The conservative government last year pledged to take 12,000 refugees from Syria on top of its 13,750 annual quota. The centre-left opposition Labor Party says it will double the annual quota to 27,000 by 2025 if it wins elections on July 2nd.
"They won't be numerate or literate in their own language, let alone English. These people would be taking Australian jobs, there's no question about that," Peter Dutton said when asked about the proposed increase in the humanitarian intake quota.
“For many of them that would be unemployed, they would languish in unemployment queues . . . and the rest of it so there would be huge cost and there’s no sense in sugar-coating that, that’s the scenario,” he told Sky News late on Tuesday.
Sharp reactions
The comments drew sharp reactions from Labor and the small left-wing opposition Greens Party, which is arguing for the intake quota to be increased to 50,000 people.
Labor leader Bill Shorten blasted Mr Dutton and prime minister Malcolm Turnbull for lowering the tone of the election.
“Mr Dutton didn’t just insult refugees when he made those comments. He insulted the millions of migrants who’ve contributed to making this a truly great country,” Mr Shorten told reporters.
Greens senator Sarah Hanson-Young called the comments “xenophobic” in a Twitter post.
Labor says it will continue the government’s immigration policy, but Mr Turnbull is seeking to portray Labor as weak on border security.
Behnam Satah, a 30-year-old asylum seeker detained on Manus Island in Papua New Guinea, said many in the camp were well educated and would be a boon to the Australian economy.
"If one day we go to Australia, history will prove this. And that day I will go to [Dutton] and say: 'what do you say now?'," said Mr Satah, who was studying a Master's Degree in English Education before fleeing his native Iran.
The Nauru and Manus Island camps have become a headache for Mr Turnbull. In the past month, two asylum seekers have set themselves on fire in protest against their treatment on Nauru. One of them, an Iranian man, died.
Papua New Guinea has also said it plans to close the Manus Island centre after its supreme court ruled it unlawful, raising questions about where the refugees would be resettled.
Reuters