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Australia’s Primate comments on asylum-seeker policy

October 13, 2016

Archbishop Philip Freier took part in a public meeting yesterday in Melbourne, together with Tim Costello, and spoke about the Australian Government’s treatment of asylum seekers.  

Below is a press release from the office of the Primate Archbishop Philip Freier:

Toxic debate ‘damaged Australia’s soul’

12 Oct 2016 

The toxic asylum-seeker debate has “damaged Australia’s soul”, World Vision CEO Tim Costello told a public meeting in Melbourne today.

Mr Costello said it would not have been possible for the Abbott Government to have cut Australia’s overseas aid to its lowest level ever “without this toxic debate”.

In the third of Melbourne Anglican Archbishop Philip Freier’s public conversations for the year, Mr Costello said the world was “retribalizing”, driven by questions of identity.

Archbishop Freier questioned the national political leadership, which took a much harsher approach on both sides than former Prime Ministers Malcolm Fraser and Bob Hawke. He said when people normalised such misleading language as “illegals” about asylum-seekers, it was not surprising that the next step was harsh punishment.

He said the most fundamental value was that of human life, even though border security was properly an important responsibility for governments.

Mr Costello said Government policy was built on three pillars of stopping the boats, indefinite detention and temporary protection visas. Because the first pillar had been successful, the second could be detached, and refugees in off-shore detention centres could be resettled without risking a rise in people-smuggling and deaths at sea.

The conversation, at Deakin Edge Theatre in Federation Square, was moderated by ABC Radio’s John Cleary. Extracts will be broadcast on ABC local radio on Sunday night, October 16.