200 Tamil Tigers ‘sailing to asylum’ in Australia
June 20, 2010 11:33 pm
Sri Lankan officials have warned that a vessel carrying up
to 200 asylum-seekers could be headed for
As Kevin Rudd faces rising internal concern that the issue is hurting Labor, the Prime Minister will today hold a meeting of the full ministry to mark what could be the last parliamentary sitting week before the election, amid rising leadership speculation.
Labor backbenchers said yesterday they had “sent a message” to Mr Rudd’s office on asylum-seekers in the past fortnight, and several frontbenchers confirmed it was a live issue in the electorate.
As the Rudd government faces a looming deadline on whether
to lift a three-month suspension of Sri Lankan asylum claims, the country’s
High Commissioner to
The High Commissioner said yesterday he had credible information that a boat, believed to be connected to remnants of the Tamil Tigers, had upwards of 200 people on it.
“My information is that there is such a boat,” Mr Walgampaya said yesterday.
“Earlier on, the boat was going to
Mr Walgampaya also called on the government to extend the freeze on Sri Lankan asylum claims, saying there was evidence it had been effective.
“I would certainly like to continue as it is,” he said.
“I think boat arrivals have reduced as a result. If they continued it that would be good.”
On June 10, The Australian reported that the Philippines Coast Guard had in May issued an alert for the MV Sun Sea, formerly known as the Harin Panich 19.
Mr Walgampaya said the venture was being organised by remnants of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (Tamil Tigers or LTTE).
“We are told that the boat itself does not belong to the LTTE but they are people who have links to the LTTE,” Mr Walgampaya said.
Ahead of today’s ministry meeting in Canberra, three Labor frontbenchers conceded asylum-seekers were an issue in the electorate, and one pointed to the Prime Minister himself telling the ALP caucus the government needed to sell its message better.
“There’s a strongly entrenched debate around asylum-seekers,” one frontbencher said.
“People are asking: what is Labor going to do about boatpeople,” another Labor MP told The Australian.
“Efforts are being made to get that through to the Prime Minister’s office.”
Another Labor frontbencher said: “We’ve all recognised that its certainly an issue and we certainly need to communicate what we are doing.
“At the moment, there’s a misunderstanding that’s being whipped up by talkback radio.
“The Prime Minister said that we need to better communicate what we’re doing in this area.”
The remarks came as outspoken Australian of the Year Patrick
McGorry told a World Refugee Day rally in
“If you ask the right questions, you’ll get the right answers from the Australian public and I think they’ve been led down the wrong track by a failure of leadership,” Professor McGorry said. – (The Australian)