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When a boat carrying Chinese men arrived in Western Australia last month it was unusual. Not only because it's rare for boats to make it to the mainland but those on board are almost never from China. So why are Chinese nationals so desperate to get to Australia that they pay people smugglers? Featured: Wing Kuang, ABC reporter
The review looked at allegations the Home Affairs Department used contractors to deliver regional processing services that were suspected of misusing taxpayer money in Nauru and Papua New Guinea. This feature explains more. - Offshore detention ஆஸ்திரேலியாவிற்கு வெளியே குடிவரவு தடுப்புக் காவலில் வைத்து புகலிடக்கோரிக்கைகளை பரிசீலனை செய்யும் திட்டத்தை நடைமுறைப்படுத்த லஞ்சம், பணமோசடி மற்றும் பிற குற்றச் செயல்களில் ஈடுபட்டதாக சந்தேகிக்கப்படும் நிறுவனங்களுக்கு ஆஸ்திரேலிய அரசாங்கம் ஒப்பந்தம் வழங்கியுள்ளதாக மதிப்பாய்வு அறிக்கை ஒன்று கண்டறிந்துள்ளது. இது குறித்த செய்தியின் பின்னணியை வழங்குகிறார் செல்வி.
Claims of financial mismanagement offshore A 6 week cease fire plan now in the hands of Hamas Beth Mooney stars, as Australia claims the deciding T-20 game against South Africa And incredible news for a Hollywood actor, who's fighting Stage 4 cancer See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Claims of financial mismanagement offshore A 6 week cease fire plan now in the hands of Hamas Beth Mooney stars, as Australia claims the deciding T-20 game against South Africa And incredible news for a Hollywood actor, who's fighting Stage 4 cancer See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Claims of financial mismanagement offshore A 6 week cease fire plan now in the hands of Hamas Beth Mooney stars, as Australia claims the deciding T-20 game against South Africa And incredible news for a Hollywood actor, who's fighting Stage 4 cancer See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
How the fall of Kabul triggered a new wave of Afghan asylum-seekers, and what the federal Government's going to do about it. Find out more about The Front podcast here and read about this story and more on The Australian's website or search for The Australian in your app store. This episode of The Front is presented by Claire Harvey, produced by Kristen Amiet, and edited by Lia Tsamoglou. Our music is by Jasper Leak.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
An election candidate, who previously signed the deal with the Australia in 2013, says he will reinstate the original agreement if elected.
We're live now with Farzan Parsinejad, Chevron's Senior Advisor of Flowlines and Risers, and our very own VP Global Offshore Accounts, Cobie Loper, to discuss the recent Joint Development Agreement to improve offshore processing efficiencies through technologically advanced products and services.
The federal government is trying to show there's a difference between its border policies and Labor's by turning attention to Temporary Protection Visas. But what do those living on the visas make of the debate?
Resettling refugees offshore, destroying people smuggler networks and deterring people from arriving by boat.
In just over a week's time, Australia's controversial offshore processing policy in Papua New Guinea will end, eight years after the deal was struck. Around 100 men remain in PNG and many are stressed about about what the future holds.
На наставу ће се прво вратити ученици предшколског узраста, прве и 12. године, а сви остали ће бити у клупама од 25. октобра. Измене у плану отварања државе омогућиће додатне олакшице за потпуно вакцинисане грађане. Нови лидер Националне странке и заменик премијера Пол Тул затражио да се што пре започне довођење радника из иностранства, како би се решио недостатак радне снаге у сектору пољопривереде.
Chính sách duyệt xét người tị nạn đến Úc bằng việc giam giữ họ ở các trung tâm dành cho người tầm trú tại Papua Tân Guinea từng bị thế giới lên án. Nay các trung tâm giam giữ này sẽ đóng cửa vào tháng 12, sau tám năm hoạt động. Úc sẽ gởi người tầm trú đi thuyền đến Úc vào trại giam giữ ở một quốc gia Thái Bình Dương khác là Nauru.
The Australian and Papua New Guinea governments have agreed to end a regional resettlement arrangement, but around 120 asylum seekers remain in PNG.
After more than eight years, Australia's involvement in offshore processing in Papua New Guinea is officially coming to an end. The decision taken by the Federal Government leaves 124 asylum seekers and refugees with the option of remaining in PNG or relocating to Nauru.
近年才移民澳洲的市民,未必知道蜂擁而至的船民問題,曾讓多個澳洲聯邦政府進退維谷。相信阻止船民抵澳的最強一招,莫過於前任總理陸克文與巴布亞新幾內亞於 2013 年 7 月簽署的離岸甄別協議,其中一個主要內容是:即便一個人被甄別為難民,他也不能前來澳洲定居。
The Australian and Papua New Guinea governments have agreed to end eight years of off-shore processing in PNG in December.
Offshore processing is where people seeking to claim asylum in Australia and arrive by boat are transferred to and detained in processing centres in Nauru and Manus Island. Refugee activist says that Australia's ongoing detention of asylum seekers in offshore processing centres has racked up enormous costs, both human and financial. This feature explains more - ஆஸ்திரேலியா நோக்கி புகலிடம் தேடி கடல் வழியே படகில் வருபவர்கள் ஆஸ்திரேலியாவிற்கு வெளியே தடுத்து வைக்கப்பட்டு அவர்களின் புகலிடக் கோரிக்கைகள் பரிசீலனை செய்யப்படும் நடைமுறை மீண்டும் அறிமுகமாகி கிட்டத்தட்ட ஒன்பது ஆண்டுகள் முடிவடைந்துள்ளன. Offshore Processing நடைமுறையின் நோக்கம் நிறைவேறியதா? இந்த நடைமுறையினை தொடர்ந்து கடைபிடிப்பது அவசியமா? போன்ற விடயங்களை அலசுகிறது இந்த விவரணம். தயாரித்து வழங்குகிறார் செல்வி.
In questi giorni in Australia si ricordano i 20 anni dal cosidetto "affare Tampa", quando il salvataggio da parte di una nave norvegese di oltre 430 richiedenti asilo provenienti dall'Afghanistan causò un muro contro muro con il governo di Canberra, deciso a non accogliere sul suolo australiano nessun potenziale rifugiato.
Australia's off-shore processing policy towards asylum seekers arriving by boat is 20 years old this week. Over that time, the policy has often been credited with "stopping the boats", so much so that other countries over the years have been inspired to try to copy it. But did off-shore processing really stop the boats? Today on The Signal, with a new refugee crisis brewing in Afghanistan, we look at how our off-shore asylum seeker system actually works, and ask why the Government seems to talk about it less and less. Featured: Madeline Gleeson, Senior Research Associate, Andrew and Renata Kaldor Centre for International Refugee Law, University of New South Wales, Sydney
Australia's off-shore processing policy towards asylum seekers arriving by boat is 20 years old this week. Over that time, the policy has often been credited with "stopping the boats", so much so that other countries over the years have been inspired to try to copy it. But did off-shore processing really stop the boats? Today on The Signal, with a new refugee crisis brewing in Afghanistan, we look at how our off-shore asylum seeker system actually works, and ask why the Government seems to talk about it less and less. Featured: Madeline Gleeson, Senior Research Associate, Andrew and Renata Kaldor Centre for International Refugee Law, University of New South Wales, Sydney
Australia's off-shore processing policy towards asylum seekers arriving by boat is 20 years old this week. Over that time, the policy has often been credited with "stopping the boats", so much so that other countries over the years have been inspired to try to copy it. But did off-shore processing really stop the boats? Today on The Signal, with a new refugee crisis brewing in Afghanistan, we look at how our off-shore asylum seeker system actually works, and ask why the Government seems to talk about it less and less. Featured: Madeline Gleeson, Senior Research Associate, Andrew and Renata Kaldor Centre for International Refugee Law, University of New South Wales, Sydney
Australia's multi-billion-dollar offshore processing system has demonstrably failed to stop boats, save lives or break the business model of people smugglers, according to a new policy brief from UNSW's Kaldor Centre for International Refugee Law. Released at a pivotal moment when the policy is drawing political interest elsewhere as an ‘Australian model', ‘Cruel, costly and ineffective: the failure of offshore processing in Australia' marks nine years since Australia resumed its bipartisan policy of intercepting asylum seekers at sea and forcibly transferring them to the Pacific nations of Nauru and Papua New Guinea. For the first time, Kaldor Centre researchers Madeline Gleeson and Natasha Yacoub break down the common perception of offshore processing as a single policy, explaining how instead it has unfolded in four distinct phases since August 2012. Critically, they note that Australia has been caught up in the fourth and final phase – in which the government stopped transferring people offshore and has been trying to extricate itself from the arrangements – for more than seven years now. Read the policy brief: https://www.kaldorcentre.unsw.edu.au/sites/kaldorcentre.unsw.edu.au/files/Policy_Brief_11_Offshore_Processing.pdf
هشت سال از زمان از سرگیری سیاست «پردازش برون مرزی» تقاضاهای پناهجویی و پناهندگی افرادی که سعی می کردند خود را با قایق به استرالیا برسانند می گذرد. برنامه فارسی رادیو اس بی اس در مورد سیاست «پردازش برون مرزی» (offshore processing) تقاضاهای ویزا گفتگویی داشته با آقای فردین نیکجو وکیل متخصص امور مهاجرتی استرالیا که توجه شما به شنیدن آن جلب می شود.
Hukuk uzmanlarından oluşan bir koalisyon, yeni yasaların mültecilerin süresiz gözaltına alınmasına yol açacağından korktukları için seslerini yükseltiyor Sözkonusu mevzuat, vizeleri iptal edilen ancak zulüm görme riski olmasınedeniyle ülkelerine dönemeyen ve gözetim evlerinde tutulan mülteci yada göçmenlere yöneliktir.
Despite COVID-19 travel restrictions, another 35 refugees who'd spent years in Papua New Guinea, have arrived in the United States under a resettlement deal that it agreed to with the Australian Government back in 2016.
2019 marked another year of changes to Australia's immigration policies. With a look back at everything from controversial legislation to the launch of new visas, here are the immigration-related stories those made headlines. - گزرنے والا سال آسٹریلیا میں امیگریشن پالیسی کی تبدیلیوں کا سال تھا۔ امیگریشن اور اس کے قوانین اس سال بھی آسٹریلیا میں بحث و مباحثے کا موضوع رہے۔ لیکن اگر میڈیویک، ، تامل خاندان کی ملک بدری کی ڈرامائی صورتحال اور مستقل سکونت یا پی۔آر ویزوں میں کٹوتی کے قوانین کو امیگریشن سے جڑی خبروں کی شہ سرخیاں کہا جائے تو شائد غلط نہ ہوگا۔ جانئیے کے متنا زعہ قوانین سے لے کر نئے ویزہ سسٹم تک میں ہونے والی تبدیلیاں کیا تھیں ؟
2019 marked another year of changes to Australia's immigration policies. With a look back at everything from controversial legislation to the launch of new visas. - 2019'da, Avustralya’nın göçmen yasaları yine değişti. Tartışmalı yasa tasarılarından yeni vizelere, göçmen kanunlarıyla ilgili bu yıl degişen her şey.
Refugee lawyers say the federal government is trying to deflect attention away from the plight of people on Nauru and Manus Island by continuing to campaign against the Medevac laws.The law allows refugee or asylum seekers to be transferred to Australia temporarily for urgent medicare care after they have been assessed by two independent doctors.But the federal government says the legal provision is being exploited by people wanting to settle in Australia.Please listen to the full report in Pashto language. - اسټراليا کې يو ځل بيا د کډوالو او پناه غوښتونکو مسلې او ترڅنګ يې د حکومت سخت دريځ تاوده بحثونه راپارولي.
It's been ((Fri 19)) six years since Australia announced no asylum seeker who arrived by boat would be resettled in Australia. Today, hundreds are living in limbo, detained on Manus Island and Nauru. - U petak 19. srpnja navršilo se šest godina otkad je Australia donijela odluku da ni jedan tražitelj azila koji u zemlju pristigne brodom neće dobiti mogućnost naseliti se u Australiji.Danas na otocima Manusu i Nauruu, u limbu još uvijek žive na stotine pritvorenih tražitelja azila.
In a matter of minutes, the Squiz Today podcast will get you across the news headlines. Published each weekday at 6.00am, this short daily news podcast is designed to fit into your morning routine – perfect for the commute, the gym or over a morning coffee.More about Squizheads: https://www.thesquiz.com.au/squizheads/Sign up to The Squiz Today email: www.thesquiz.com.auContacts us: hello@thesquiz.com.au
It's been six years since Australia announced no asylum seeker who arrived by boat would be resettled in Australia. - شش سال پیش استرالیا اعلام کرد پناهجویانی که با قایق خود را به استرالیا برسانند در این کشور اسکان داده نخواهد شد و هنوز پس از طی چندین سال بسیاری از این پناهجویان در بلاتکلیفی بسر می برند.
It's been ((Fri 19)) six years since Australia announced no asylum seeker who arrived by boat would be resettled in Australia.Today, hundreds are living in limbo, detained on Manus Island and Nauru.On 19 July 2013, Australia's then-prime minister, Kevin Rudd, made the announcement that would mark the beginning of six years of offshore detention.It was targeted at people smugglers and was aimed at stopping drownings at sea.Earlier this year, Kevin Rudd defended his actions, saying that the drownings stopped.He blamed successive governments for continuing what was meant to be a temporary policy to last only 12 months, to be subject to review, and conducted to meet the UN standards on the proper humanitarian conditions for asylum seekers.Please listen to the full report in Pashto. - اسټراليا کې دننه او بهر توقيف ځايو کې دا مهال شاخوا ۳۰،۰۰۰ پناه غوښتونکي او کډوال له نا معلوم راتلونکي سره وخت تيروي.
It's been six years since Australia announced no asylum seeker who arrived by boat would be resettled in Australia.Today, hundreds are living in limbo, detained on Manus Island and Nauru. - នៅថ្ងៃសុក្រទី១៩កក្កដានេះ គឺមានរយៈពេល៦ឆ្នាំគត់ គិតចាប់តាំងពីពេលដែលប្រទេសអូស្រ្តាលីបានប្រកាសថា គ្មានជនស្វែងសុំសិទ្ធិជ្រកកោនដែលមកតាមទូក តាំងទីក្នុងប្រទេសអូស្រ្តាលីនោះទេ។ នៅថ្ងៃនេះ មនុស្សរាប់រយនាក់កំពុងតែរស់នៅក្នុងស្ថានភាពមិនប្រាកដប្រជា ជាប់ក្នុងមន្ទីរឃុំឃាំងនៅលើកោះម៉ានុស និងកោះណាវរុ។
As Australia approaches the halfway point of its three-year term on the United Nations Human Rights Councils, experts and advocates are urging leaders to make the second half more impactful than the first. - همچنان که استرالیا به نیمه اول دوره عضویت سه ساله خود در شورای حقوق بشر سازمان ملل نزدیک می شود، کارشناسان و مدافعان حقوق بشر از رهبران این شورا خواسته اند تا در نیمه دوم نسبت به نیمه نخست اقدامات تاثیرگذارتری کنند.به این ترتیب، با درخواست مصرانه ناظران از دولت استرالیا برای خاتمه فعالیت مراکز بازداشتگاهی برون مرزی این کشور در جزیره مانوس و نارو، این مراکز همچنان در کانون مباحثه قرار می گیرند.
As Australia approaches the halfway point of its three-year term on the United Nations Human Rights Councils, experts and advocates are urging leaders to make the second half more impactful than the first. Details can be heard here in Dari. - در حاليكه عضويت آسترليا در شوراى حقوق بشر ملل متحد به نقطۀ وسطى دور سه ساله اش نزديك ميشود٬ متخصصين و حاميان حقوق بشرى از رهبران ميخواهند كه نيمۀ دوم اين دور عضويت را نسبت به نيمۀ اول مؤثر تر بسازند. تفصيلات را در اينجا شنيده ميتوانيد.
Australia oo lagu booriyay inay xirto xeryaha qaxootiga ee Nauru iyo Manus. - Australia oo lagu booriyay inay xirto xeryaha qaxootiga ee Nauru iyo Manus.
The Doin Time show recorded an event at the Victorian Trades Hall entitled: How Can We Break the Bipartisan Support for Offshore Processing?Hosted by Refugee Action Collective.
Interview with Linda Fisk, founder of Seeds of Affinity and a Radio Seeds broadcaster about the Reintergration Puzzle conference also joined by Claire Seppings, Criminal Justice Consultant and Churchill Trust Fellow.Interview with John Dowd, President of Community Justice Coalition speaking about the NSW Government not accepting the free offer of online counselling for prisoners in their cells. Traumatised Prisoners affected are people who have committed domestic violence.Interview with Lucy Honan from the Refugee Action Collective. She spoke about an event called "How Can We Break the Bipartisan Support for Offshore Processing? which is hosted by the Refugee Action Collective (Victoria).
Stopping the boats. It's one of the most fraught topics in Australian politics, and most of the time it comes out in two soundbites: saving lives at sea, and securing our borders. Abdul Aziz Muhamat 'I was instructed to … select the children on the basis of how young they looked – because we wanted to send the message to people smuggling networks that even the youngest children were eligible for transfer to the island.' Greg Lake, former Director of Offshore Processing in the Department of Immigration In this episode, Aziz tells Michael what it actually feels like to make that journey, and why he made the decision to get on a boat bound for Australia. What was going through his mind? Did he know what he was getting himself into before he stepped onboard? Michael also speaks to somebody with a unique perspective to offer, because it was his job to stop the boats. Former immigration department official Greg Lake tells Michael about the extraordinary lengths he was asked to go to to carry out official government policy – and why he ultimately walked away from the task. Transcript Download a transcript of this episode in Adobe PDF format. In this episode Abdul Aziz Muhamat Michael Green Greg Lake, former Director of Offshore Processing, Department of Immigration Our theme music was composed by Raya Slavin. Music used in this episode includes: ‘Kilvo' and ‘Ontario' by Radian, ‘Rhodes Viola Multiple' by Keith Fullerton Whitman, ‘Four-Day Interval' by Tortoise, ‘Outward' by Rhythm & Sound, ‘Plastic Energy Man' by Papa M, ‘Whitetail' by Low, ‘Mdrmx' by Brothomstates, ‘Malá Strana' by Gui Boratto, ‘Collapse of Materialists' by Forma, ‘Blau' by Ganger, ‘Guitars for Plants' by Mice Parade, ‘There Are Other Words (They Have Not Told You Of)' by Jan Jelinek and ‘On' by Aphex Twin. More information The Messenger is a co-production of Behind the Wire and the Wheeler Centre. It's produced by Michael Green, André Dao, Hannah Reich and Bec Fary, with Jon Tjhia and Sophie Black at the Wheeler Centre.Narration by Michael Green. With reporting by Abdul Aziz Muhamat. Additional fact checking by the Guardian's Ben Doherty; transcription by Claire McGregor, Victoria Grey, Eugenia Zoubtchenko, Laura Mitchell and many more. This episode was edited and mixed by Bec Fary and Jon Tjhia. Thank you Dana Affleck, Angelica Neville and Sienna Merope. Also to Cameron Ford, and to Behind the Wire's many participants and volunteers. Behind the Wire is supported by the Bertha Foundation.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Kaldor Centre for International Refugee Law Conference PROTECTION ELSEWHERE, BUT WHERE? National, Regional and Global Perspectives on Refugee Law 20 November 2015 Session 1: Turnbacks and Offshore Processing Chaired by Julian Burnside AO QC Turning back the boats: Australia’s interdiction of irregular migrants at sea - Professor Andreas Schloenhardt, TC Beirne School of Law, University of Queensland Refugee processing on Nauru - Rea Hearn Mackinnon, Principal Member of the Nauru Refugee Status Review Tribunal Australia’s offshore processing regime: responsibility and rights - Madeline Gleeson, Kaldor Centre, UNSW