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Summary Version
Social Policy Group
Australia and Refugees, 19012002: An Annotated Chronology Based on
Official Sources
Dr Barry York - Social Policy Group
Last updated 16 June 2003
This Chronology is issued electronically. It will be kept up-to-date
online. The date of the latest update is noted clearly above.
Part 1 of 10
Table of Contents
Next page
Acronyms
Glossary
Section 1: Australia and Refugees, 1901-1991
Scope and Methodology
From White Australia to Port Hedland
Endnotes
| AIDAB |
Australian International
Development Assistance Bureau |
| AMEP |
Adult Migrant Education
Program |
| ASA |
Asylum Seekers Assistance
Scheme |
| BIPR |
Bureau of Immigration
and Population Research |
| CAAIP |
Committee to Advise on
Australia's Immigration
Policies |
| CALFRIC |
Committee for the Allocation
of Loan Funds to Refugees from Indo-China |
| CRSS |
Community Refugee Settlement
Scheme |
| CPA |
Comprehensive Plan of
Action |
| CSSS |
Community Settlement
Services Scheme |
| DIEA |
Department of Immigration
and Ethnic Affairs |
| DILGEA |
Department of Immigration,
Local Government and Ethnic Affairs |
| DIMA |
Department of Immigration
and Multicultural Affairs |
| DIMIA |
Department of Immigration
and Multicultural and Indigenous Affairs |
| DORS |
Determination of Refugee
Status Committee |
| DP |
Displaced Person |
| EXCOM |
Executive Committee of
the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees |
| HREOC |
Human Rights and Equal
Opportunity Commission |
| ICEM |
Inter-governmental Committee
for European Migration |
| ICCPR |
International Covenant
on Civil and Political Rights |
| IRO |
International Refugee
Organisation |
| IRT |
Immigration Review Tribunal |
| LSIA |
Longitudinal Survey of
Immigrants to Australia |
| OMA |
Office of Multicultural
Affairs |
| PRC |
People's Republic of
China |
| RAAF |
Royal Australian Air
Force |
| ROMAMPAS |
Review of Migrant and
Multicultural Programs and Services |
| RRT |
Refugee Review Tribunal |
| RSP |
Rescue at Sea Pool |
| RSRC |
Refugee Status Review
Committee |
| SAC |
Special Assistance Category |
| SHP |
Special Humanitarian
Program |
| UN |
United Nations |
| UNAMET |
United Nations Mission
in East Timor |
| UNHCR |
United Nations High Commissioner
for Refugees |
| USSR |
Union
of Soviet Socialist Republics |
In basing the chronology on official source material,
the official terminology has been retained. The use of language has been
important in recent debates over refugee policy and there is a need to
make clear the meanings of the most significant terminologies.
Asylum seeker: any person who moves to another
country for the purpose of claiming protection under the 1951 UN Convention
Relating to the Status of Refugees or the 1967 Protocol Relating to the
Status of Refugees.
Boat people: A term that gained currency
during the late 1970s as a description of asylum seekers who arrived in
Australia without legal authority in boats not authorised by the Australian
Government to land in Australia. The term was revived during the 1990s,
as other unauthorised boats carrying passengers with no legal authority
to enter Australia, came into
Australian waters. The term has been used in official publications since
1977 when it first appeared in the Department of Immigration and Ethnic
Affairs' annual review, Review '77.
Country of first asylum: The first, usually
neighbouring country to which a refugee flees. The world's refugee camps
are in countries of first asylum.
Displaced persons: persons fleeing conflict,
human-made or natural disasters either within their own country or across
national boundaries. (National Population Council, Refugee Review,
1991, p. 220)
Illegal immigrants: persons who enter or
remain in Australia without a
valid visa or travel authority. The most common form of illegal immigration
is visa over-staying. Asylum seekers are not illegal immigrants as they
have invoked Australia's obligations
under the 1951 UN Convention and 1967 Protocol. They become illegal when
they are denied refugee status and avenues of review and appeal are exhausted.
Illegal migration racket (see: people smuggling)
Offshore visas: Where visas authorising entry
into a country are issued to people in other countries, they are described
as being issued 'offshore'.
Onshore visas: Where visas authorising stay
in Australia are issued to people
after they have already arrived, legally or illegally, in Australia,
they are described as being issued 'onshore'.
People smuggling: defined by the United
Nations' Global Program Against Trafficking in Human Beings as 'the
procurement of illegal entry of a person into a State of which that person
is not a national with the objective of making a profit'.
Prohibited immigrants: Under the Immigration
(Restriction) Act 1901, a prohibited immigrant was any person who
failed a dictation test in a European language. The Act was overhauled
in 1958 and the dictation test provision replaced by a system of entry
permits. The Migration Act 1958 defined a prohibited immigrant
as someone who does not hold an entry permit that is in force.
Refugee: the 1951 UN Convention Relating
to the Status of Refugees defines a refugee as any person who 'owing
to well-founded fear of being persecuted for reasons of race, religion,
nationality, membership of a particular social group or political opinion,
is outside the country of his nationality and is unable or, owing to such
fear, is unwilling to avail himself of the protection of that country'.
Third country: Where refugees move from their
countries of first asylum to another country, such as Australia,
that country is described as a third country (the first being the home
country, and the second being the country of first asylum).
Unauthorised arrivals: Any person who arrives
in Australia by air or sea without
the correct documentation. (Department of Immigration and Multicultural
Affairs, Protecting the border: immigration compliance, Canberra,
1999, p. 9.)
White Russians: The name given to Russians
who left the Soviet Union in the early 1920s as defeated opponents of
the 1917 Bolshevik Revolution. In the 1950s, another wave of White Russians
came to Australia, this time
consisting of those who had escaped from Russia
into China or Manchuria after
1917. The White Russians fleeing the Communist Government of China included
many who were the children of the 1920s generation. (B. Christa, 'Russians',
in J. Jupp (ed.), The Australian people: an encyclopedia of the nation,
its people and their origins, Cambridge University Press, 2001, pp.
639640.)
(Note: The definitions of 'Country of first asylum',
'Offshore visas', 'Onshore visas' and 'Third country' are taken from the
glossary in A. Millbank, The problem with the 1951 Refugee Convention,
Research Paper No. 5, Department of the Parliamentary Library,
200001.)
Section 1: Australia
and Refugees, 19011991
This chronology covers a long and complex period of Australian
immigration and refugee experience: the years 1901 to 2002. It is arranged
in two sections: 19011991 and 19922002. The chronology is presented
in two parts because of the complexity of developments of the past decade.
The Migration Reform Act 1992 may be seen as responding to a new
period characterised by mandatory detention of asylum seekers in remote
centres and by the rise of the organised crime known as 'people smuggling'.
The central rationale of the chronology is that the past
lives on in the present, and policy-makers can only benefit from understanding
how things have developed and changed over time. Current debates often
draw on generalised assessments of the past. For example, there is an
assumption shared by supporters and opponents of refugee policy alike
that Australia has a humanitarian
tradition in such matters. (Readers may also be interested in the Parliamentary
Library's audio-brief, Australia's
humanitarian tradition in refugee intake: myth or reality?, produced
in December 2002.) The chronology is not interpretative but rather presents
the selected facts for others to analyse as they see fit.
The chronology is based on official sources such as Annual
Reports, Ministerial Media Releases, reports of official inquiries and
Year Books. It attempts to identify important events in the development
of refugee policy and intake, and to track the trends and responses in
official thinking, while placing them in the context of the wider Australian
immigration program and international developments. The reliance on official
sources is justified by the fact that they are the most authoritative
for the purposes of the chronology. Limits of space also precluded any
broadening of the methodology.
In basing the chronology on official source material,
the terminology of different periods has been retained. The use of language
has been important in recent debates over refugee policy. No historian
worthy of the discipline can sanitise the past in the interests of current
political considerations and this applies to language as much as anything
else. But there is also a need to make clear the meanings of the most
significant terminologies, such as 'prohibited immigrants', 'illegal entrants',
'unauthorised arrivals', 'boat people' and 'illegal migration'. A glossary
is included to define such terms. The changing terminologies reflect developments
in law and official attitudes. This principle also applies to the names
of countries: for example, Australian governments used 'Kampuchea'
from the late 1970s to the early 1980s but then adopted 'Cambodia'.
This is reflected by the use of both in the chronology.
From White Australia
to Port Hedland
It comes as a surprise to many that Australia
did not have an explicit refugee policy, separate from its general immigration
policy, until the late 1970s. Australia
certainly received refugees prior to the 1970s but it was in response
to the Indo-Chinese refugee crisis of the late 1970s and early 1980s that
a comprehensive, ongoing, approach was adopted.
From the beginning of the Commonwealth of Australia in
1901, the framers of immigration policy made it clear that Chinese and
other 'non-whites' had to be stopped from permanently settling here. They
did this chiefly through a 'dictation test', whereby anyone seeking admission
could be tested in a European language. Failure of the test automatically
imposed 'prohibited immigrant' status on the individual. The test was
usually administered at the point of disembarkation and was applied selectively
to Chinese and other 'non-whites'. It proved an effective mechanism of
exclusion and deterrence.
It should be noted that prior to the formation of the
League of Nations in 1919 governments around the world were not interested
in formulating policy to deal specifically with refugees. Such interest
developed through the League and the United Nations, with the usual driving
force for refugees being wars and their aftermath rather than the classic
'persecution' criteria set up by the two international bodies. Australia
was under no international obligation to take refugees until it ratified
the 1951 UN Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees and then
it still remained free to discriminate on racial grounds in its intake.
The White Australia Policy, embedded in the Immigration
(Restriction) Act 1901, remained a guiding principle of Australian
immigration until its gradual abolition between 1966 and 1973. In such
a context, any Australian concern with responsibilities toward refugees
was limited in its humanitarianism by the reality of racial exclusion.
This point was illustrated by the treatment of Asian evacuees taken in
during the Pacific War. More than 6000 were granted protection but as
soon as the war was over, the government took action to repatriate them.
About 900 refused to be repatriated and so the War-time Refugees Removal
Act 1949 was passed. It mattered not that many had married Australians
or established businesses hereand that all had been fleeing the common
Japanese militarist enemy during World War Two. In the final analysis
it was the colour of skin that mattered.
In addition to racism, Australian refugee policy was
framed by decisive factors, such as the need for labour after the Second
World War and the politically bipartisan desire to stand firmly against
the Soviet Union in the Cold War. The admission of more than 170 000
Displaced Persons from European camps between 1947 and 1954 was followed
by large intakes of Hungarians from 1956 to 1958 and Czechs and Slovaks
in 1968. Most were anti-Communist, and the Displaced Persons were recruited
essentially because they were a convenient source of labour. It was not
until 1973 that political refugees from an anti-Communist pro-Western
regime would be admitted: the Chileans.
The 1970s mark a watershed in the development of refugee
policy for a number of reasons. Firstly, Australia
abolished the White Australia Policy in 1973: race was no longer a criterion
in immigration selection procedures. The principle was tested soon afterwards,
with the Indo-China refugee crisis, following the defeat of United States-backed
regimes in Vietnam and Cambodia
in 1975. But the 1970s were also notable because Australia
no longer required the old type of immigrant. No longer primarily seeking
'factory fodder', Australian governments during the 1970s became more
interested in skills-based selection and family reunion. The policy towards
refugees continued to be pragmatic but required sharper definition. Thus,
on 24 May 1977, the Minister for Immigration and Ethnic Affairs, the Hon.
Michael Mackellar MP, articulated the basic principles, and enunciated
a strategy and practical initiatives, for a comprehensive policy. It is
worth noting the four key principles, as they have remained a formal basis
of policy to the present day:
1. Australia fully
recognises its humanitarian commitment and responsibility to admit refugees
for resettlement.
2. The decision to accept refugees must always remain with
the Government of Australia.
3. Special assistance will often need to be provided for
the movement of refugees in designated situations or for their resettlement
in Australia.
4. It may not be in the interest of some refugees to settle
in Australia. Their interests
may be better served by resettlement elsewhere. The Australian Government
makes an annual contribution to the United Nations High Commissioner for
Refugees (UNHCR) which is the main body associated with such resettlement.(1)
The above statement is historically significant because
it shows that Australia formally
recognised that its commitment to refugees must be an ongoing one. Through
the development of practical mechanisms for refugee policy implementation,
refugees were recognised as a separate component of the wider immigration
program, not just another migrant group. In these respects, it may be
said that the 1977 Mackellar statement marked the beginning of an explicit
refugee policy.
Also interesting about the principles is the idea that
it may be best for some refugees to be resettled elsewhere. Mackellar's
landmark statement was made at a time when Australia
had to confront the reality of the massive displacement of Vietnamese
people. By 1979, there were well over 300 000 Indo-Chinese refugees
in camps in South-East Asia.
The establishment by the Australian Government in March
1978 of an inter-departmental Determination of Refugee Status Committee
(DORS) was a response to the unauthorised arrival of boats carrying mainly
Vietnamese refugees. As a signatory to the United Nations' 1951 Convention
Relating to the Status of Refugees and to the 1967 Protocol, Australia
needed a mechanism for assessing refugee status onshore (i.e. on Australian
territory).
The chronology encompasses the other 'watershed' year
of 1989, when a new set of international events posed challenges to decision-makers
and when unauthorised boat arrivals became an issue again. The collapse
of the Soviet Union ended the Cold War, and altered perceptions, particularly
in Europe, of those who had previously been seen as refugees from Communism.
Of more immediate importance to Australia,
though, was the response of Australia's
Prime Minister, Bob Hawke, to the action taken by the Government of the
People's Republic of China against
protestors occupying Tiananmen Square in June 1989. The number of asylum
applications in Australia increased
by over 10 000: from 1260 in 1989 to 12 130 in 1990 (and to
16 740 in 1991). The applicants were mainly Chinese students already
in Australia.
In 1989, the Migration Act 1958itself a product
of a fundamental overhaul of the Immigration Act 1901was reformed
by the Migration Legislation Amendment Act 1989. The 1989 Act established
immigration rules and criteria within the legislation with a view to ensuring
accountable and consistent decisions. The new regulations, numbering about
200 in all, greatly reduced room for discretion by departmental officers
and tightened control of the management of the immigration program. They
also created a two-tier system for the review of migration decisions.
In these ways, the Act sought to create a fairer processing system and,
in doing so, sought to remove the need for unsuccessful onshore visa applicants
to appeal to the judiciary. In the words of Senator the Hon. Robert Ray,
the Minister for Immigration, Local Government and Ethnic Affairs in the
Hawke Government, the Regulations 'sought to improve the ability to curb
abuse of the immigration program by people seeking to come to Australia
illegally'. Minister Ray made 'no apology for the toughness of the new
law as far as illegal entrants are concerned'.(2) The 'toughness'
included the introduction of mandatory deportation of 'illegal entrants'
and the power to sell their possessions, with a view to recovering costs
relating to detention and deportation.
As mentioned previously, 1989 saw the return of unauthorised
boat arrivals in Australia, the
first detected since 1981. In November 1989, a small boat carrying 26
people from Cambodia reached
Broome, Western Australia, followed by two more boats carrying larger
numbers in March and June of 1990. By 31 December 1991, 438 people had
arrived in nine boats. The Government responded in the 19911992 Immigration
Budget Statement by allocating additional funds for the expansion of staff
and facilities related to onshore processing and detention of unauthorised
arrivals. It also resolved to establish a new detention centre at Port
Hedland in Western Australia. The first group of 'boat people' to be detained
at Port Hedland consisted of 104 Indo-Chinese, transferred from Darwin
in October 1991.
A new period in refugee policy, characterised by the
detention of unauthorised arrivals in remote centres, had begun. The detention
policy would be further developed during the 1990s, beginning with the
Migration Reform Act 1992 which made detention mandatory for all
unlawful non-citizens (i.e. non-citizens without a valid visa). At the
same time, Australia maintained
its planned program of refugee and humanitarian intakes at a rate of about
12 000 a year. The new period, 19922002, is covered later in this
paper.
- Hon. Michael Mackellar, Minister for Immigration and Ethnic Affairs,
Statement, House of Representatives, Debate, 24 May 1977, p.
1714.
- Senator the Hon. Robert Ray, Minister for Immigration, Local Government
and Ethnic Affairs, Media Release, MPS 88/89, 18 December 1989.
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