Soren wrote on Dec 16
th, 2013 at 1:39pm:
|dev|null wrote on Dec 16
th, 2013 at 1:20pm:
They are still illegal immigrants if they overstay their visas. That they do so deliberately makes them far worse than an Asylum Seeker who applies for Asylum directly to the authorities don't you think? Oh, sorry, you don't think, do you? You merely react like all Xenophobes!
[mod edit: see how your post actually looks sensible without the smilies at the end?]
Visa overstayers are not illegal immigrants - they have no claim of any sort to settlement. When they are found, they are sent home.
Visa overstayers have broken immigration laws, being here illegally. Asylum Seekers are not here illegally and have broken no immigration laws by claiming Asylum.
Quote:As to choosing non-signatory Indonesia or Malaysia, the only reason they do it is to then pay people smugglers to bring theme to Oz where they expect to be settled - not merely protected, but settled. Only that is worth all that money and risk. Protection isn't. Mere protection can be had in any number of countries much closer to home, free of charge.
No it can't. If those nations are not signatories, then there is no guarantee of protection. If those nations are signatories but still engage in religious/political persecution then there is no guarantee of protection.
Quote:This is why they are not refugees: they are not interested in refuge, they are only interested in permanent settlement.
There is a problem with that? If you're fleeing for your life, you are hardly likely to ever return to your home nation, now are you?
Quote:People interested in permanent settlement are called immigrants. But these people could not legally migrate to Australia as they have nothing to offer this country and so they would not meet the requirements for legal immigration.
They cannot legally migrate because they cannot do so from their home countries, which is the first requirement under Australian migration regulations.
Quote:The Convention obliges us to give them refugee, not permanent settlement. This is the sticking point.
The Convention requires that we not punish or place disincentives in their path to prevent them from claiming Asylum. We have consistently done both in the last ~15 years. We have not kept to our obligations under the Convention, only a fool would attempt to claim otherwise. We already know you're a fool! Thanks for confirming it.