SYDNEY: Australian politicians were warned Friday of more
asylum-seeker boat deaths while parliament goes on a six-week winter
break after they failed to find a compromise on the divisive issue.
Parliament
broke up Thursday after Senate opposition and Greens lawmakers rejected
a private member's bill to send boatpeople offshore for processing,
leaving the issue at a stalemate following a spate of deadly incidents.
Independent
MP Andrew Wilkie said parliamentarians should not be going into recess
when such an important matter remained unresolved.
"We should be
sitting today, we should have continued sitting last night, we should
sit next week, we should sit until we get a solution," he told state
broadcaster ABC.
"I think there is every chance in the world that more people will die during this six-week recess," he said.
The
bill was introduced after two crowded asylum-seeker boats sank off the
remote Australian territory of Christmas Island, near Indonesia, over
the past week.
In the first incident, 110 people were saved and
an estimated 90 drowned while the sinking of a second boat on Wednesday
left four dead, with 130 rescued.
With few legislative options
left, Prime Minister Julia Gillard commissioned an expert review led by
former defence force chief Angus Houston to look at the policy with
"fresh eyes".
She promised to take on board whatever it
suggested, but would not commit to dropping her controversial Malaysia
people-swap plan if doing so was recommended.
Opposition leader Tony Abbott described her move as a pointless exercise.
"This
committee is not a solution. This is outsourcing the prime
ministership," he said as politicians began leaving Canberra for their
constituencies.
Since January a stream of asylum-seekers have
attempted to reach Australia by boat, with the latest vessel carrying 44
passengers intercepted overnight taking the 2012 total to 68 boats with
5,046 on board.
Most come from Indonesia on unseaworthy vessels.
The
government wants to send them to Malaysia for processing, but the
opposition refuses to agree, arguing Kuala Lumpur is not a signatory to
UN refugee conventions.
Abbott favours re-opening a detention
centre on the Pacific island of Nauru and turning boats back where
possible. The left-leaning Greens, on whom the government relies for its
rule, are opposed to any offshore processing. - AFP
Source : TheStar
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