Successive Australian governments pay people smugglers: reports
Updated: 2015-06-16 14:05
(Xinhua)
|
|||||||||||
CANBERRA - Australia's Prime Minister Tony Abbott has maintained he will do "whatever is necessary" to keep asylum seeker boats out of Australian waters, amid claims paying people smugglers has been a policy of successive governments.
The fresh allegations that the former Labor governments of Kevin Rudd and Julia Gillard were involved in the payment of people smugglers arose on Tuesday, following the current Abbott government's repeated refusal to deny its involvement in paying people smugglers to turn a boatload of asylum seekers back to Indonesia.
Australian intelligence officials have made cash payments to members of Indonesian people-smuggling rings for at least the past four years, a Fairfax Media report said on Tuesday.
It said multiple sources confirmed such payments were a tactic of successive governments, though incentivizing turnbacks were not the policy of the Rudd and Gillard governments.
Members of people-smuggling rings were paid for information about operations of the syndicate, or to dissuade them from launching boats, according to Fairfax.
When asked to comment, Labor said it would be unlawful to "divulge security or intelligence information," but denied paying people smugglers to keep people on unsafe boats.
The allegations place further pressure on Australia's weak relationship with Indonesia.
Indonesian Vice-President Jusuf Kalla said on Tuesday that the $30,000 in payments allegedly made to people smugglers by Australian officials to return asylum seekers to his country would amount to bribery.
Indonesia's Foreign Minister Retno Marsudi has accused Australia of "deflecting the issue", but Abbott remains defiant that "stopping the boats" is the major issue.
Government data says no boats of asylum seekers entered Australian territory in April or May.
"Again the only thing that really counts here is that we have stopped the boats," Abbott said on Tuesday. "The most moral thing you can do here is to stop the boats.
"We will do whatever is necessary within the law consistent with our standards as a decent and humane society to stop the boats because that is the moral thing to do."
Related Stories
Malaysia Airlines jet makes emergency landing in Australia 2015-06-12 15:15
Australia ready to host should 2022 World Cup be stripped from Qatar 2015-06-04 13:49
IBM building in flames in Australia 2015-06-02 14:54
Today's Top News
China looks for a place in EC investment fund
JF-17 fighter makes debut at Paris air show
Russia says will retaliate if US weapons stationed on its borders
Migrant crisis deepens in Italy, interior minister urges EU response
Greece and creditors fail in 'last attempt' to reach deal
Former Chinese top legislator Qiao Shi dies in Beijing at age 91
Alibaba to launch Netflix-like video streaming service
IMF team to assess yuan
Hot Topics
Lunar probe , China growth forecasts, Emission rules get tougher, China seen through 'colored lens', International board,
Editor's Picks
Premier Li embarks on Latin America visit |
What do we know about AIIB |
Full coverage of Boao Forum for Asia |
Annual legislative and political advisory sessions |
Festival Special: Apps that make holiday shopping easier |
Listed firms caught in anti-corruption net |