If immigration must stay in Home Affairs, here’s how to fix the agency. By Abul Rizvi, P&I

And while it is good the immigration compliance function has been returned to the immigration area of Home Affairs, and funding somewhat restored after being run down under Pezzullo, there is not nearly enough compliance funding to significantly increase removal of unsuccessful asylum seekers.

In other words, despite the $160 million package, the number of asylum seekers in Australia is unlikely to fall by much, if at all.

The Dutton opposition will play this for all its worth even though the situation is a direct result of Dutton’s negligence when he was minister.

If immigration must stay in Home Affairs, here’s how to fix the agency. By Abul Rizvi, P&I

Taiwan says Australian detention centre funding led Nauru to officially recognise China. By Matthew Knott and Eryk Bagshaw, SMH

Taiwan’s Foreign Ministry laid the blame on the Australian-run detention centre for the rupture in diplomatic ties, but the Australian government rejected those claims and insisted that the centre has not closed and that funding arrangements with Nauru remained in place.

Taiwan says Australian detention centre funding led Nauru to officially recognise China. By Matthew Knott and Eryk Bagshaw, SMH

Freed immigration detainee sues Australian government for damages for alleged false imprisonment. Paul Karp, The Guardian

A stateless Kurdish man released from immigration detention is seeking “aggravated” and “compensatory” damages for alleged false imprisonment – the first such case sparked by the high court’s ruling that indefinite detention is unlawful.

The intellectually impaired man, known as DVU18, has sued the immigration minister, Andrew Giles, through a litigation guardian, in a case that could pave the way for the 149 people released to sue for hundreds of thousands of dollars of compensation each.

Freed immigration detainee sues Australian government for damages for alleged false imprisonment. Paul Karp, The Guardian

Australia may be next for Rohingya refugees ‘running out of places to go’. Chris Barrett, SMH

“But the security situation in the camps is just completely out of control. There are kidnappings, rapes ... the Bangladesh authorities just don’t have control of what’s happening inside the camps.”

The violence from competing armed criminal gangs has left the Rohingya at the most vulnerable they have been since more than 700,000 crossed the border in 2017, according to a new report by Singapore’s International Institute for Strategic Studies………..

……………Brewster welcomes the extra Australian support on the ground but argues it is in the Albanese government’s interests to help build the capability of Bangladeshi maritime authorities and incentivise them to stop vessels departing, potentially for Australia.

Given the pushback in Indonesia, the inevitability of offshore processing and detention in Nauru, not to mention the dangers of such a perilous trip, may not be such a barrier for the Rohingya, Brewster says.

Australia may be next for Rohingya refugees ‘running out of places to go’. Chris Barrett, SMH

By default not design: the end of the asylum consensus. By Khalid Koser, The Interpreter

This retreat from asylum principles is not new, indeed it could be argued to have begun with the so-called “Pacific Solution” adopted by Australia over 20 years ago to send asylum seekers to island nations in the region, a policy which the UK is largely mimicking today. But norm-busting is now becoming the norm, and rather than being perceived as pariahs, the states enacting these policies are now considered by others proactive.

By default not design: the end of the asylum consensus. By Khalid Koser, The Interpreter

Australia’s ‘inhumane’ offshore detention regime denounced by global human rights organisation. By Sarah Basford Canales, The Guardian

Australia’s reputation on human rights took a hit on the world stage last year, Human Rights Watch’s latest annual report has said, after the Labor government returned asylum seekers to offshore immigration on Nauru less than three months after the last detainees were removed.

Despite labelling Australia as a “vibrant democracy” that “mostly protects the civil and political rights of its citizens”, the Australian chapter of the global human rights advocacy group has levelled heavy criticism at the federal government’s decade-long “inhumane” offshore detention regime, with Australian director Daniela Gavshon describing the policy as “embarrassing” for the country.

Australia’s ‘inhumane’ offshore detention regime denounced by global human rights organisation. By Sarah Basford Canales, The Guardian

Afghan girls detained and lashed by Taliban for violating hijab rules. By Zahal Ahad, The Guardian

Girls as young as 16 have been arrested across the Afghan capital, Kabul, in the past week for violating the Taliban’s hijab rules.

The girls – who were detained in shopping centres, classes and street markets – were accused of “spreading and encouraging others to wear a bad hijab” and wearing makeup.

Since taking power in Afghanistan in August 2021, the Taliban have further restricted women’s access to education, employment and public spaces. In May 2022, they decreed that women should cover themselves from head to toe, revealing only their eyes.

Afghan girls detained and lashed by Taliban for violating hijab rules. By Zahal Ahad, The Guardian

Turned back by Australia, this family has detailed its 'crushing' journey to asylum. By Mai Hoa Pham & Shirley Glaister, SBS

The cohort of 20 Vietnamese nationals were rejected by Australia because they arrived by boat. More than eight years after 'escaping' Vietnam, the group has finally been resettled in Canada.

In 2017, three mothers and 12 children escaped Vietnam for the second time, having been returned to the country by Australian immigration officials two years earlier.
They were among a cohort of Vietnamese nationals rejected by the Australian government after arriving by boat.
Their second attempt ended when the small boat they were on capsized off Indonesia, where they remained for five years, which included a period of incarceration inside an immigration detention centre.
Finally, in 2022, the 20-strong group found refuge in Canada.

Their arduous journey is the focus of a book by Australian author Shira Sebban, 'Vietnam’s Modern-Day Boat People: Bridging Borders for Freedom’.

Turned back by Australia, this family has detailed its 'crushing' journey to asylum. By Mai Hoa Pham & Shirley Glaister, SBS

Locked up for seven years and beaten: Refugee Khan Ali is a face of Australia’s shame. SMH, Saba Vasefi

University of Technology Sydney law academic Dr Anthea Vogl asserts that the violence and harm Khan Ali experienced in immigration detention highlight the punitive nature of Australian detention policies and the lack of timely and effective oversight and accountability mechanisms. Dr Vogl emphasises the permanent nature of the harms caused by mandatory immigration detention, stating, “Khan Ali entered detention as a child and, after seven years in multiple centres, now lives in the community with lasting mental and physical injuries.”

Locked up for seven years and beaten: Refugee Khan Ali is a face of Australia’s shame. SMH, Saba Vasefi

Two more immigration detainees arrested in wake of high court ruling. By Sarah Basford Canales, The Guardian

A further two former immigration detainees released in the wake of the high court’s NZYQ ruling have been rearrested after breaches of their conditions.

An Afghan man, 45, was arrested and charged in Sydney’s western suburbs on Saturday after allegedly breaching his curfew on a number of occasions, the Australian federal police confirmed in a statement on New Year’s Eve.

A 38-year-old Iranian man was separately arrested at a Perth property on Christmas Eve for allegedly breaching his visa. He has been charged with one count of failing to comply with a curfew condition.

Both men face a maximum penalty of five years’ jail and a $93,900 fine under fresh laws passed in December.

Two more immigration detainees arrested in wake of high court ruling. By Sarah Basford Canales, The Guardian

Gillian Triggs says no one is copying Australia’s refugee policies. By Latika Bourke, Sydney Morning Herald

30/12/23 , Sydney Morning Herald

Gillian Triggs says the United Kingdom’s failure to send asylum seekers offshore has demonstrated to the rest of Europe that trying to copy Australia’s hardline methods doesn’t work.

In an interview to mark the end of her term in Geneva as the UNHCR’s Assistant High Commissioner for Protection, the former Australian Human Rights Commission president backed the recent High Court ruling determining that Australia cannot detain people indefinitely as a ‘‘ good outcome’’ .

She says the notion that Australia’s illegal methods for stopping the boats are serving as a model for European countries is ‘‘ absurd and unworkable’’ , a fact reinforced by the UK’s failed attempts to offshore migrants to Rwanda.

‘‘ Australia is not a model for other countries,’’ Triggs said. ‘‘ The Australian model is not viewed favourably. Of course some on the right will say ‘they’ve stopped the boats’ . That is true – for reasons that are illegal.

‘‘ But that model cannot work in the Mediterranean, nor can it work in the English Channel.’’

For years Australia remained an international outlier due to its policy of intercepting boats bound for its shores and placing the asylum seekers and migrants abroad in offshore island detention centres.

The controversial policy, formulated by former prime minister John Howard in 2001, was broadly popular at home but internationally condemned by human rights bodies. In November, the High Court ruled that keeping people in immigration detention facilities indefinitely was illegal, overturning a central practice of Australia’s hardline border policy.

Triggs said several countries had explored adopting the ‘‘ so-called Australian model’ ’ in the past three years, but had abandoned it after seeing the UK’s copycat approach that has racked up £240 million ($447 million) in costs and failed to deport a single asylum seeker since the policy’s announcement in 2022.

‘‘ What we’ve seen over the last 18 months or so has been a decision by those EU countries that flirted with the idea, they’ve retreated completely away from it because they do not want to be associated with the opprobrium, the cost and the political turmoil that it’s created,’’ she said.

‘‘ And I say this with great pleasure, they have decided to go into the EU pact – the pact’s not perfect, but it’s a very good achievement.’’

The EU last week agreed to share the responsibility of dealing with migrants who journey across the Mediterranean.

Asylum seekers will be detained while their claims are processed over 12 weeks. EU states that do not want to accept refugees will pay into a fund to help share the costs of processing and accepting refugees, currently borne by Greece and Italy.

Triggs says countries do have a right to detain asylum seekers while their claims are processed, but only for a few weeks while health and security checks are carried out.

‘‘ It’s about the way in which that detention is carried out, and what Australia has done is detain indefinitely .’’

On the High Court ruling overturning indefinite detention she says: ‘‘ Excellent, that’s a good outcome.’’

‘‘ It’s taken 20 years for the High Court of Australia, that would be reached in a matter of weeks or months in Europe and the UK.’’

Migration has become a top issue across several continents ahead of 2024’s blockbuster year of elections, and the issue has already propelled Geert Wilders’ far-right party to political highs in the Netherlands.

It has also triggered debate about whether the Refugee Convention is fit for purpose to deal with modern mass migration movements.

‘‘ We see it as more fit for purpose than it’s ever been,’’ Triggs said.

‘‘ Where it fails is where countries have not implemented it properly, the classic example being the UK and Australia refusing to allow a process of asylum.’’

She says it is ironic that Australia then turned to the UN’s program to resettle asylum seekers languishing in Nauru and Papua New Guinea to New Zealand.

‘‘ This is disgraceful for a country like Australia, with the resources and skills and sophistication; it’s extraordinary that that’s what they’ve chosen to do.

‘‘ Australia benefits from a rulesbased system, you can’t just pick the bits you like and discard the ones you don’t like.’’

But Triggs says the UNHCR is sympathet ic to countries trying to cope with the blurring of economic migrants into asylum seeker routes.

‘‘ These are what we call mixed movements.’’

The UNHCR is trialling a new whole-of-journey approach that involves identifying economic migrants as early as possible and linking them through the UN bodies, the private sector and NGOs, as well as immigration programs by countries in need of labour.

‘‘ If we can make that determination earlier along the route, then the person concerned knows they’re never going to be a refugee under any proper legal system,’’ Triggs said.

‘‘ They’ve got to face the fact that what they want is an economic opportunity, so let’s help them.’’

She says global instability is contributing to mass movements, noting that the UNHCR has had to deal with more than 40 crises this year – double the average.

But she says there are reasons to be optimistic, despite fears that migration could fuel the populist right to political success in 2024’s mega year of elections, pointing to the way Europe – particularly Poland and Moldova – have welcomed 8.3 million Ukrainians following Russian President Vladimir Putin’s invasion of Ukraine in 2022.

‘‘ That is a massive movement of people, and yet Europe coped perfectly well ... the sky didn’t fall in,’’ she says.

Gillian Triggs says no one is copying Australia’s refugee policies. By Latika Bourke, Sydney Morning Herald

The Ukrainian refugees seeking asylum in Australia. ABC News Video Lab

By the end of 2023 an estimated six million refugees will have fled Ukraine. Of those, over 11-thousand visas were granted for Australia. But for those fleeing their homeland, adjusting to a new life is not without challenges.

The difference between life in Australia on an humanitarian visa and with temporary protection visa status.

The Ukrainian refugees seeking asylum in Australia. ABC News Video Lab

Refugee advocate wonders why we’re so unkind. By Katarina Lloyd Jones, Canberra City News

AT 78, Jane Keough wonders how she could get to a stage of her life when “my country is not kind and not fair and not open”.

Sister Keough has spent the last 21 years advocating for the rights of refugees, with the help of her Catholic church group, the Brigidine Sisters. 

“We used to live off the sheep’s back, then we lived off the gold and minerals and now we’re living off volunteers,” she says. 

Refugee advocate wonders why we’re so unkind. By Katarina Lloyd Jones, Canberra City News

Egyptian asylum seeker Sayed Abdellatif asks why he's still detained after High Court ruling. SBS News, AAP

Darryl Li, an anthropologist and legal scholar at the University of Chicago who has researched Arab foreign fighters and aid workers in Eastern Europe, said Abdellatif's case typified human rights breaches.

"We have seen over the past two decades how the transnational hunt for 'jihadists' has licensed all sorts of laws and policies that erode fundamental rights for all," he said.

Sayed Abdellatif : “I came when my youngest son was one-and-a-half years old and now he is thirteen-and-a-half years old. I wish I know the answer of why I am still inside.”

Egyptian asylum seeker Sayed Abdellatif asks why he's still detained after High Court ruling. SBS News, AAP

Refugee support settlement pilot review suggests more volunteers need to be paired with households. By Emma D'Agostino, ABC News

University of Queensland researchers reviewing the CRISP program recommended training and resources be reviewed to better prepare supporters, and that the minimum number of volunteers in each group be increased to share the load.

Refugee support settlement pilot review suggests more volunteers need to be paired with households. By Emma D’Agostino, ABC News

Migrants scapegoated as cause of Australia’s housing crisis a ‘disturbing’ trend, advocates say, The Guardian, Cait Kelly

The organisations called on the government and opposition to show leadership in the housing affordability debate and focus on what they say the main drivers.

“Migrant communities are being scapegoated for Australia’s housing crisis,” Azize said. “Governments have given handouts to investors, allowed unlimited rent increases, and stopped building homes for the people who need them.

Migrants scapegoated as cause of Australia’s housing crisis a ‘disturbing’ trend, advocates say. The Guardian, Cait Kelly