In earlier blogs I have highlighted the contrast between Canada and Australia’s programs to settle Syrian refugees.
Australia continues to be a laggard.
In Parliament last week, the Immigration Minister, Peter Dutton, said that a total of 29 refugees had been settled as part of a 12,000 intake that Tony Abbott had announced in September last year.
In November last year, the Canadian government announced that it would accept 25,000 Syrian refugees. The latest official figures from the Canadian government reveal that 26,176 Syrian refugees had arrived. Many more are in process.
The arrival of only 29 refugees from Syria in Australia points to the lack of political will by the Australian government, the inability of the new Department of Immigration and Border Protection to respond quickly and the inordinate delays as a result of ASIO checks.
Political inertia, bureaucratic failure and security obsession has resulted in a dismal humanitarian response.
John Menadue is the Founder and Editor in Chief of Pearls and Irritations. He was formerly Secretary of the Department of Prime Minister and Cabinet under Gough Whitlam and Malcolm Fraser, Ambassador to Japan, Secretary of the Department of Immigration and CEO of Qantas.
Comments
2 responses to “John Menadue. A dismal humanitarian response to the Syrian tragedy: political inertia, bureaucratic failure and security obsession.”
I say go nuclear or not at all. The latest US subs are only 1.8 billion and available now. My cousin was a Royal Navy nuclear sub skipper and they have had them for forty years. If we buy anything else we are just playing games.
I think you are referring to Jon Stanford’s article.
John Menadue