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Scott Morrison to head to Sri Lanka amid row over fate of asylum boat Scott Morrison urged to visit war-torn north during trip to Sri Lanka
(about 7 hours later)
The immigration minister, Scott Morrison, is heading to Sri Lanka as the furore continues over government silence on the fate of hundreds of asylum seekers. The immigration minister, Scott Morrison, has been challenged to ditch his Sri Lankan political minders and visit the country's war-torn north to hear first hand about ongoing human rights abuses.
The federal government will not confirm reports 203 Tamils have been handed over to Sri Lankan authorities after they were intercepted trying to reach Australia by boat. Morrison's trip to Colombo this week coincides with ongoing federal government silence over the fate of Tamil asylum seekers after they were reportedly intercepted trying to reach Australia by boat.
The government is refusing to confirm reports that 203 Tamils have been handed over to Sri Lankan authorities at sea.
Human rights groups have warned the Tamils could face torture, rape and long-term detention if they are returned to Sri Lanka.Human rights groups have warned the Tamils could face torture, rape and long-term detention if they are returned to Sri Lanka.
Morrison will attend a ceremony this week to mark the handing over of two former customs bay class patrol boats that Australia has given the Sri Lankan government. Morrison will attend a ceremony to mark the handing over of two former Australian Customs bay class patrol boats that have been given the Rajapaksa regime to help combat people-smuggling operations.
He will arrive on Wednesday and meet the country's foreign minister and defence officials. It has been more than a week since an asylum seeker boat originating from India and carrying 153 Tamils, and a second boat with 50 people on board from Indonesia, sailed towards Christmas Island.
The United Nations refugee agency has been critical of potential shortcuts in processing the asylum seeker claims, which have reportedly happened at sea. The United Nations refugee agency has expressed profound concern about alleged processing shortcuts on their claims for refugee status.
One boat originated in India with 153 Tamil asylum seekers, including about 30 children, and a second, carrying 50 people, may have sailed from Indonesia. Human rights groups have warned the Tamils could face torture, rape and long-term detention if they are returned to Sri Lanka.
The Coalition's Senate leader, Eric Abetz, said Australians would understand the government's decision not to give "a blow-by-blow description in the middle of an operational matter". A spokesman for the Australasian Federation of Tamil Associations, Siva Sivakumar, urged Morrison to take a leaf out of the book of the Conservative British prime minister, David Cameron, and visit Jaffna.
"In due course these matters will be revealed," he told the ABC's Insiders program on Sunday. Cameron last year visited the region hardest hit during Sri Lanka's 37-year civil war to hear first hand about the plight of displaced people and ongoing abuses.
Morrison refused on Thursday to confirm any details about the fate of the boats, including reports that immigration officials were screening asylum seekers at sea. "We would him encourage him to [go to Jaffna] ... to meet the Tamil leaders, the church leaders, the Tamil representatives," Sivakumar told AAP.
"The Australian government in our undertakings and what we do as part of Operation Sovereign Borders is always cognisant of our international obligations and the relevant conventions as they apply and we always act in accordance with those obligations," Morrison said. If Morrison sticks to the itinerary of army commanders, he said, he'll only be shown what the Sri Lankan government wants him to see.
Labor, the Greens and refugee advocates have said the government would be breaching international law if it sent people back into harm's way. "Show some mercy," Sivakumar said.
Labor's immigration spokesman, Richard Marles, accused Morrison of trying to "slink out of the country".
Australian Greens leader Christine Milne urged the minister to explain why he was sending tortured people – some of whom had been "hung by their thumbs" – back to their persecutors.
The Greens will put up a motion in the new Senate this week demanding an explanation.
The former Liberal prime minister Malcolm Fraser has said on Twitter that Tamil asylum seekers being handed back to Sri Lanka at sea was redolent of handing over Jews to the Nazis in the 1930s.
Cabinet minister Eric Abetz rejected that comparison.
He declined to comment on what he called an "operational matter", but said border protection authorities would treat the asylum seekers according to Australia's international obligations.
He rejected accusations the government had "disappeared" the Tamils.
"In due course these matters will be revealed, but it makes absolute sense that you do not give a blow-by-blow description in the middle of an operational matter," Senator Abetz told ABC TV on Sunday.
A spokesman for Morrison pointed out that the minister and the foreign affairs minister, Julie Bishop, made an independent visit to Jaffna, organised by the Tamil National Alliance, while in opposition in February 2013.
At the time, Morrison acknowledged that it was illegal under Sri Lankan law to leave the country without following proper processes and those who were returned, by either voluntary or forced means, faced interviews.
He said people were then moved back into the country's resettlement program.
Jobs and land issues were the main complaints the Tamils raised and Morrison noted that the military were building houses for civilians.
After the visit, the pair were adamant the Coalition's tough policy position was correct.
They admitted there was a long way to go on Sri Lanka's path to reconciliation but were heartened by the steps taken so far.