Tag Archives: Foreign Minister Bob Carr

Australia to send boatpeople to developing nations

Australia plans to resettle asylum-seekers in developing countries as part of a radical overhaul of its border protection policy to help stem the flood of boatpeople arriving on its shores, reports said Friday.

Papua New Guinea is at the heart of the revamp, News Limited newspapers and the Australian Broadcasting Corporation said, with the Pacific nation’s Prime Minister Peter O’Neill expected to jet into Australia on Friday for an announcement.

Under a deal Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd is said to have thrashed out, asylum-seekers would not only be processed in other countries, such as poverty-stricken Papua New Guinea, but also permanently resettled there.

The aim is to pose a strong disincentive for people considering the dangerous boat journey from Indonesia, particularly so-called economic migrants who make the trip not to flee persecution but for a better life in Australia.

Australia has struggled to stem an influx of asylum-seekers arriving by boat, with record numbers turning up in 2012 and more than 13,000 so far in 2013.

Hundreds have drowned making the journey and Canberra’s plans to send them to remote Pacific islands for processing has so far failed to stop the flood.

Foreign Minister Bob Carr has said asylum-seekers are increasingly “economic migrants”, many from Iran and Sri Lanka.

The ABC reported Friday that Indonesia had agreed to a request by Prime Minister Rudd to tighten visa restrictions for visitors from Iran, who currently enjoy visa-free entry to the sprawling Southeast Asian nation with many then taking a boat illegally to Australia.

It follows Rudd’s recent meeting with Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono in Jakarta, where they announced an agreement to promote greater regional co-operation on cross-border immigration.

Australia’s Deputy Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said further details would be forthcoming.

“We’re in discussions, announcements will be made when they’re made. I’m not in a position to make further detail here,” he said, but welcomed the Indonesian move on Iranians.

“What it will do is stop the transit traffic to go from Iran, Middle East, Indonesia, get your visa on arrival and then have already pre-organised a people smuggler to put you on the boat,” he said.

“That will be far more difficult if there’s not an automatic transit through Indonesia. It’s an example of good co-operation and I congratulate and thank the Indonesian government for doing what they’ve done.”

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Asylum boats 'god-awful' problem, Australia says

Asylum-seekers drowning on the treacherous boat journey to Australia presented a “god-awful” problem, Home Affairs Minister Jason Clare said, after four more deaths were reported following a dramatic sea rescue.

Authorities pulled 144 people from the surging waters off the Indian Ocean territory of Christmas Island late Tuesday, but they also recovered four bodies after the ship carrying an estimated 150 people capsized and sank.

“This is a wretchedly difficult area and it has been poisoned by politics,” Clare said of boatpeople.

“If we are going to fix this god-awful problem then we need to work together.”

Australia has struggled to stem an influx of asylum-seekers arriving by boat, with record numbers turning up in 2012 and more than 13,000 so far in 2013.

Hundreds have drowned making the journey and Canberra’s plans to send asylum-seekers to remote Pacific islands for processing has so far failed to stop the numbers from increasing.

Clare said the centre-left Labor government — whose scheme to transfer asylum-seekers arriving by boats to refugee camps in Malaysia was blocked by the conservative opposition — was working on changes to its policy.

But he said the problem required domestic and regional cooperation and Australians wanted the political parties to work together on the issue.

“We have been fighting about this for more than 10 years,” he said.

“The government should be given the power it needs to stop people dying at sea.”

In the latest tragedy, the boat capsized as it was being escorted in heavy weather by two Australian navy ships to Christmas Island, after issuing a distress call earlier in the day.

The boats pulled survivors from the water as a military aircraft dropped life rafts.

Rear Admiral David Johnston, commander of Border Protection Command, said the 30-metre boat had not been as “jam packed” as other vessels that had been intercepted and appeared quite solid.

But he said the vessel, which was carrying men, women and children, sank quite quickly once it overturned.

Australian border protection officials have been faced with an increased tempo of arrivals in recent months, despite scores of drownings.

On Friday a boat carrying 97 asylum-seekers sank, claiming the life of a baby boy and leaving eight others missing.

In a bid to slow down arrivals, Australia’s refugee tribunals have reportedly been ordered to take revised country assessments into account when looking at asylum claims from people from Iran, Afghanistan and Vietnam.

This directive came after Foreign Minister Bob Carr said many people seeking asylum, particularly from Iran, were economic migrants, not refugees.

Prime Minister Kevin Rudd is expected to soon announce a new-look asylum-seeker policy — an issue set to be key in elections due this year.

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Australian premier to visit new Chinese leaders

australia‘s prime minister says the country can’t take its trading relationship with China for granted in an increasingly competitive world as she prepared to lead a senior government delegation to australia‘s biggest export market.

Julia Gillard said she would on Friday lead “the most senior Australian political delegation ever to visit China” only weeks after China‘s President Xi Jinping and Premier Li Keqiang took office. Her delegation includes Foreign Minister Bob Carr, Trade Minister Craig Emerson and Financial Services Minister Bill Shorten.

She told a Foreign Correspondents Association lunch in Sydney on Thursday: “The timing of this visit so soon after the new leadership has entered office is deliberate and reflects the importance of our rapidly evolving relationship with China and our high-level political oversight of that relationship.”

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Readout of Vice President Biden’s Meeting with Foreign Minister Robert Carr of Australia

By The White House

Vice President Biden met with Foreign Minister Bob Carr of Australia today at the White House. The Vice President underscored the strength of the partnership and friendship between the United States and Australia, highlighting the shared values and common purpose that have linked our governments and our peoples in alliance for more than six decades. The Vice President noted the indispensability of our close collaboration with Australia in Asia and the Pacific, as we both seek to promote peace and security, shared prosperity, and a rules-based order in the region and around the world. The Vice President and the Foreign Minister discussed a range of regional and global challenges, including North Korea and the Middle East peace process. The Vice President expressed appreciation for Australia’s role on the United Nations Security Council and highlighted opportunities for closer collaboration on a range of global issues.

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Source: White House Press Office

Australian PM names Cabinet emphasizing loyalty

Prime Minister Julia Gillard emphasized loyalty over experience in new Cabinet selections named Monday after a bungled leadership challenge laid bare intra-government turmoil further damaging her party’s image months before an election.

Five ministers resigned or were sacked from their executive jobs for promoting a challenge by Gillard’s predecessor Kevin Rudd that failed when he decided against running on the ballot within the ruling Labor Party.

Gillard called the leadership mess “appalling” in remarks Monday to reporters.

“It was an unseemly display,” she said. “Today as a government we can be united and with a sense of purpose,” she added.

Most of the lawmakers whom Gillard promoted were known loyalists in the longstanding rivalry between Gillard and Rudd.

The Resources and Energy Ministry, crucial to Australia‘s mining-oriented economy, was given to Special Minister of State Gary Gray, a former gas company executive from resource-rich Western Australia state. The position had been filled to acclaim by Rudd supporter Martin Ferguson since the Labor government was first elected under Rudd’s leadership in 2007.

Transport Minister Anthony Albanese stayed, even though he had been tipped to be deputy prime minister if Rudd regained the leadership. Reports have said ministers urged Albanese not to resign because he was too important to the government.

Gillard promoted Albanese by giving him the portfolios Regional Development and Local Government. Those ministries had been held by Simon Crean, whom Gillard dumped for publicly calling for a leadership ballot.

Gillard said she was confident of Albanese’s loyalty.

“I have always been able to work with Minister Albanese well,” she said. “He’s been very central to the life of this government and I believe he will serve very well and with a very strong sense of loyalty into the future.”

Australian National University political scientist Michael McKinley said the promotions were clearly not made on merit.

“If they were any good, they would have been in the Cabinet already,” he said.

Foreign Minister Bob Carr, who has denied media reports that he had been prepared to back a Rudd challenge, remained in his post.

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Filipino militants free Australian hostage

Al-Qaida-linked militants in the southern Philippines on Saturday released an emaciated-looking Australian man near a coastal town where they kidnapped him for ransom 15 months ago.

Warren Richard Rodwell was brought to police by residents of Pagadian city who saw him walking before dawn near the fishing port, where his abductors dropped him off, said local police chief Julius Munez.

Rodwell “looked OK, just tired. But he looked like he lost a lot of weight,” Munez said.

In Australia, Foreign Minister Bob Carr welcomed the news, saying Rodwell will be soon moved to a safe location. Carr said the release was a joint effort by authorities in both countries, and that the focus now was on Rodwell’s speedy recovery.

Rodwell, a former Australian soldier who was married to a Filipino woman and had settled down in the southern Philippines, was kidnapped in December 2011 from his seashore house and taken by speedboat to nearby mountainous islands where Abu Sayyaf militants are hiding.

He had since appeared in several proof-of-life videos posted by the militants as negotiations for his release dragged on. His jungle captivity appeared to have taken a toll on his health as he appeared weaker in each video.

He was one of several foreigners abducted by the Abu Sayyaf in the restive region. Two Europeans are still being held alongside a Japanese man.

Military officials said that Rodwell was held in recent months in the militants’ jungle hideouts on Basilan Island but had also been moved to nearby islands. Zamboanga del Sur, where he was released, is a short boat ride from Basilan.

The Abu Sayyaf is on the U.S. list of terrorist organizations. U.S.-backed Philippine military operations have crippled attacks and terrorist plots waged by about 350 militants, who split into several groups. But they remain a serious security threat in the impoverished region where minority Muslims have been fighting for self-rule for decades.

A Philippine security official, speaking on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to the media, said a ransom was paid for Rodwell’s release, as was usually the case with other hostages held by the Abu Sayyaf over the last two decades.

“The Rodwell family has shown enormous courage throughout …read more
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'Prisoner X' worked for Israeli government, Australia foreign minister confirms

Australia‘s foreign minister on Wednesday confirmed for the first time that a dual Australian-Israeli citizen who died in a maximum-security Israeli prison had been working for Israel‘s government, and he raised the possibility of a diplomatic spat if the man’s Australian passport was used for espionage.

Ben Zygier died in an apparent suicide in his prison cell in December 2010, and reports have said he had worked for the Mossad spy agency. Israel‘s government has refused to release details about the case even after a gag order was partially lifted that barred local media from reporting on it at all. Australia‘s government has said only that Zygier, an Australian who immigrated to Israel, had been charged with unspecified security offenses.

Foreign Minister Bob Carr said that Zygier was working for Israel‘s government, though he would not confirm or deny reports he had worked for Mossad. But Carr warned that the case raises serious questions about the use of Australian passports by dual nationals working for foreign governments, saying that if it’s confirmed Israel used Zygier’s passport for intelligence-gathering purposes, Australia would register “the strongest protest.”

“Certainly if Australian passports were misused here, that’s something we are forced to take very seriously,” Carr told reporters. “No country can allow the integrity of its passport system to be compromised. We can’t say whether it happened with Mr. Zygier’s several passports. I hope the inquiry that takes place … in Israel can clarify this position.”

The mysterious case has strained relations between Australia and its close ally Israel, which suppressed all details of Zygier’s imprisonment and death until Australia‘s national broadcaster broke the story last month. The Australian Broadcasting Corp. reported that Zygier, who had previously only been known as “Prisoner X,” was a Mossad agent who hanged himself in what was supposed to be a suicide-proof solitary confinement cell.

The issue of misused passports is particularly sensitive for Australia. In 2010, an Australian investigation concluded that Israel had counterfeited four Australian passports used by a suspected hit squad that murdered a Hamas official in Dubai. Australia retaliated by expelling an Israeli diplomat.

Carr said there was no evidence Zygier was involved in the Dubai killing.

Carr ordered a review into how his foreign affairs department handled the case and released a report on Wednesday criticizing a lack of communication between Australian officials. The review also found that Zygier was granted regular access to a lawyer and was visited by family members more than 50 times during his imprisonment.

Carr said Australia has asked Israel to provide it with information on the charges Zygier was facing, but Israel has refused because of a gag order.

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Australia asks Israel to explain prison death

Australia has asked Israel to explain the mysterious death of an Australian-Israeli citizen and alleged Israeli spy in an Israeli prison two years ago.

Foreign Minister Bob Carr said on Sunday he had asked Israel to contribute to his department’s investigation into the case of the man who died in an Israeli prison in December 2010.

Carr had initially said last week his department had been unaware that the prisoner — who was known as Ben Zygier, Ben Allen and Ben Alon — had been in custody until his Australian family asked for his body to be repatriated.

But Carr corrected the record and ordered the departmental investigation on Wednesday after discovering that Australian intelligence officers had alerted some department officials to the arrest 10 months before his death.

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Australia seeks release of senator in Malaysia

Australia is seeking the release of a senator who was detained by Malaysian authorities at Kuala Lumpur international airport.

Foreign Minister Bob Carr said Australian officials were seeking the immediate release of independent Senator Nick Xenophon who was detained Saturday under national security laws as he attempted to enter Malaysia.

Carr says Malaysia intends to deport the South Australia state senator.

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Australia stops North Korea visit after nuke test

Australia‘s government on Thursday canceled a planned visit by North Korean diplomats in the wake of the secretive nation’s recent nuclear test.

Officials from Pyongyang had been scheduled to visit Canberra this weekend to try and reopen its embassy, which North Korea closed in 2008 for financial reasons.

The bid to reopen the embassy was initially welcomed by Australia, with Foreign Minister Bob Carr saying last month the move would give Australia the opportunity to air its concerns about what it views as North Korea‘s “catastrophic position on human rights.”

But on Tuesday, North Korea detonated a nuclear device at a remote underground site, defying U.N. Security Council resolutions. Australian Prime Minister Julia Gillard condemned the nuclear test, which is seen as a key step toward North Korea‘s goal of building a bomb small enough to be fitted on a missile capable of striking the U.S.

“We postponed the arrival of North Korean diplomats in Australia as a gesture following this detonation,” Carr told a Senate hearing on Thursday.

But Australia still plans to allow North Korea to reestablish its embassy, he said.

“We still adhere to the view that there’s value in having a North Korean diplomatic presence here,” Carr said.

Australia has diplomatic ties with North Korea, though they are strained. Australia imposed targeted sanctions on North Korea in 2006 in response to Pyongyang’s steps to develop atomic weapons.

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North Korea seeks to reopen embassy in Australia

Australia‘s government says North Korea is seeking to reopen its embassy in the nation’s capital.

Foreign Minister Bob Carr said Wednesday that he has welcomed the request by Pyongyang. Carr told Australian Broadcasting Corp. it would give Australia the opportunity to express its concerns about what it views as North Korea‘s “catastrophic position on human rights.”

North Korea closed its embassy in Canberra in 2008, citing financial reasons.

The Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade says a timeframe for the reopening of the embassy has not been set.

Australia has diplomatic ties with North Korea, though they are strained. Australia imposed targeted sanctions on North Korea in 2006 in response to Pyongyang’s steps to develop atomic weapons.

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Australia expands sanctions against Iran

Australia has expanded sanctions against Iran amid growing concerns over the country’s suspected nuclear weapons program.

Foreign Minister Bob Carr said in a statement Thursday that the new sanctions affect the financial, trade, energy and transport sectors.

Car said: “These sanctions further increase pressure on Iran to comply with its nuclear non-proliferation obligations and with U.N. Security Council resolutions and to engage in serious negotiations on its nuclear program.”

He said the new measures are broadly aligned with those introduced by the European Union and other countries.

Iran‘s oil exports have fallen by about half in recent months due to the punitive oil and banking measures enacted by countries including Australia and the United States over concerns Tehran is pursuing nuclear weapons. Iran denies that it is developing weapons.

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