House debates

Thursday, 29 November 2012

Private Members' Business

Migration Amendment (Reinstatement of Temporary Protection Visas) Bill 2012

9:21 am

Photo of Scott MorrisonScott Morrison (Cook, Liberal Party, Shadow Minister for Immigration and Citizenship) Share this | Hansard source

I seek leave to move:

That private Members' business notice No. 22 standing in the name of the Honourable Member for Cook be called on immediately and be given precedence over all other business until all stages of the bill have been concluded to enable this Parliament to take action to deny people smugglers a product to sell before the Parliament rises and the onset of the monsoon season, which is the most dangerous period for people to travel on boats to Australia, by:

(1) reversing Labor's decision in 2008 to abolish temporary protection visas, as part of their abolition of the Howard Government's border protection regime, that has led to more than 30,000 illegal arrivals of people by boat, more than 1,000 deaths at sea, more than 8,100 permanent protection visas being denied to people who applied for a humanitarian visa offshore because they did not come on a boat and a budget blowout for taxpayers of $6.6 billion; and

(2) re-establishing two forms of temporary protection visa that can be issued to people found to engage Australia's protection obligations who have arrived illegally by boat for a period of no greater than three years, subject to the following conditions, namely:

(a) family reunion is not permitted;

(b) if the holder of the visa departs Australia, he or she may not re-enter Australia;

(c) if the holder of the visa is no longer a refugee when the term of the visa expires they will return home;

(d) where the holder is unable to find work, access to welfare will be subject to strict mutual obligation requirements, such as work for the dole;

(e) the holder is legally barred from applying for a permanent protection visa; and

(f) where a person has transited in a country beyond their country of first asylum to Australia, in which they could have sought protection either from that country or the UNHCR in that country, they will be defined as a secondary mover and legally barred from being able to be granted a permanent protection visa.

Leave not granted.

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