Defence force ‘surge’ to detect asylum boats in Australia’s northern waters follows visa change

Aircraft surveillance has been boosted and additional ships are on patrol, navy tells Senate estimates

Australia’s defence force has boosted surveillance aircraft and ships to detect possible asylum seeker boats after the Coalition claimed people smugglers would market temporary protection visa changes to asylum seekers.

According to evidence to Senate estimates on Wednesday evening, Defence has provided “surge” support after a request from the Operation Sovereign Borders commander, Rear Admiral Justin Jones.

On Monday the Albanese government unveiled changes for 19,000 temporary protection and safe haven enterprise visa holders – who arrived before OSB started in 2013 – to gain permanent resolution of their status visas.

The shadow home affairs minister, Karen Andrews, has claimed the move could result in an increase in people smuggling, although the government insists no incentive is created because the changes apply only to the legacy caseload and there is “zero chance” of new arrivals being allowed to stay in Australia.

On Wednesday the vice chief of defence, Vice Admiral David Johnston, said “the defence force generally surges as is required to support Operation Sovereign Borders”.

“That is available to the government to employ the ADF in that nature, and we are currently providing surge support,” he told the Senate defence committee. “It is of the nature of additional aircraft surveillance and additional ships that are patrolling in our northern waters. The surge has been put in place in the last few weeks.”

Johnston would not say whether the request had been made in response to the TPV changes.

On Tuesday Border Force published a video warning prospective asylum seekers that changes to TPVs would not improve their chances of coming to Australia by boat.

“The Australian government’s decision to resolve legacy temporary visa caseloads does not change how Australia protects its borders,” Jones says in the video.

“Let me be clear, anyone who attempts an unauthorised boat voyage to Australia will be turned back to their country of departure, returned to their home country or transferred to a regional processing country.

“If you attempt an illegal maritime journey you will not settle in Australia. You have zero chance of success.”

On Tuesday Coalition senators quizzed the home affairs department about its incoming ministerial brief that TPVs were a “complementary measure” of OSB and that “changes to any single element of OSB, without effective mitigation, may result in a weakening of the overall denial and deterrence effects delivered by the operation as a whole”.

The department’s secretary, Michael Pezzullo said the Albanese government had enacted the TPV policy after months spent working through “mitigants” to prevent people smuggling ventures.

On Thursday Andrews accused Labor of “pulling apart the key pieces of Operation Sovereign Borders” as demonstrated by “the fact that additional defence assets have been moved in to protect our northern borders”.

The surge in capability was “clearly as a result of the government’s actions in relation to temporary protection visas”, she told reporters in Canberra.

Andrews told Sky News that although Labor argues “only so a certain group of people will now get the right or the ability to seek permanency here in Australia” the TPV policy allows people smugglers to argue “that Australia is open for business, that if you stay here long enough, you will get permanency here in Australia”.

About one boat a month has already been intercepted on its way to Australia by Australian officials … There have been more boats that have been stopped by the Sri Lankan navy, potentially on their way here to Australia, in fact, most likely on their way here to Australia.

“So we know that there has already been an increase in boat arrivals into or towards Australia – this is very concerning.”

Pat Conroy, the minister for international development and the Pacific, said under OSB “every single boat is turned back or returned”.

“The important point here is that there is a zero chance of resettlement for anyone coming to this country without a visa,” Conroy told ABC News Breakfast.

“Our policy is the same as the last government’s policy when it comes to this operation – every single boat is turned back or returned.”

Contributor

Paul Karp

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
Factcheck: Peter Dutton says Labor has weakened Australia’s asylum policy. Is he right?
Opposition leader claims government has cut $600m from border enforcement and reduced surveillance flights. Budget numbers tell a more nuanced story

Paul Karp Chief political correspondent

19, Feb, 2024 @8:56 PM

Article image
Peter Dutton says detainees trying to force asylum policy change
Immigration minister accuses advocates and Greens of aiding 600 refugees and asylum seekers who refuse to leave Manus Island centre

Helen Davidson

31, Oct, 2017 @6:52 AM

Article image
Australia’s defence force is expected to get its biggest overhaul in decades. Here’s what we know so far
The analysis is expected to recommend scaling back funding for some projects while others will be ‘accelerated and expanded’

Amy Remeikis

23, Apr, 2023 @3:00 PM

Article image
Labor to prioritise new asylum seeker claims as part of $160m package to tackle backlog
Shift to ‘last in, first out’ processing aims to break the business model of those making unmeritorious claims, immigration minister says

Paul Karp Chief political correspondent

04, Oct, 2023 @2:00 PM

Article image
Exploited in a crisis: why are Sri Lankans getting on boats bound for Australia?
Poor and vulnerable people fleeing Sri Lanka are being met by Australian boat turnbacks and ‘enhanced assessments’ that may breach international law

Devana Senanayake in Colombo, Aliyar Mohammed Geeth in Trincomalee, and Ben Doherty in Sydney

25, Jun, 2022 @8:00 PM

Article image
Shorten says proposed lifetime ban on asylum seekers is to appease right wing
Labor’s official response is expected this week but the Labor leader says the Coalition’s plan seems ‘ludicrous’

Gareth Hutchens

06, Nov, 2016 @12:54 AM

Article image
Asylum seekers face lifetime ban from entering Australia if they arrive by boat
New law to include refugees and will apply to any adult sent to Manus Island or Nauru since July 2013

Gareth Hutchens

30, Oct, 2016 @3:14 AM

Article image
Child among asylum seekers returned to country of origin after being sent from Australia to Nauru
Home affairs department confirms eight of the 11 people flown to island nation in September have since returned home

Paul Karp Chief political correspondent

21, Jan, 2024 @2:00 PM

Article image
Australia on track for record number of asylum seekers arriving by plane, Labor says
Labor warns of exploitation risk for rejected asylum seekers, who make up 84% of the 95,000 who arrived by plane in the past five years

Helen Davidson

08, Oct, 2019 @12:23 AM

Article image
Scott Morrison raises prospect of asylum seeker transfer to New Zealand
But the PM says Labor must accept legislation banning any resettled people from ever entering Australia

Katharine Murphy Political editor

16, Oct, 2018 @7:30 AM