Bangladeshi men found on Indonesian island claim they were intercepted at sea and turned back by Australian Border Force. By Indonesia correspondent Bill Birtles and Ari Wu, ABC News

A group of 15 men from Bangladesh found on Indonesian's southernmost Rote island say they were held on an ABF ship for a fortnight before being turned back.

Police on Rote island say the men are among a larger group that was intercepted, and that there are approximately 26 others still unaccounted-for.

Bangladeshi men found on Indonesian island claim they were intercepted at sea and turned back by Australian Border Force. By Indonesia correspondent Bill Birtles and Ari Wu, ABC News

Human Rights Watch accuses Israel of acts of genocide in Gaza over water access. By Raffi Berg, BBC

The 179-page report says that "since October 2023, Israeli authorities have deliberately obstructed Palestinians' access to the adequate amount of water required for survival in the Gaza Strip".

It says Israel intentionally damaged infrastructure, including solar panels powering treatment plants, a reservoir, and a spare parts warehouse, while also blocking fuel for generators.

It says Israel also cut electricity supplies, attacked repair workers and blocked the entry into Gaza of repair materials.

"This isn't just negligence," said HRW executive director Tirana Hassan. "It is a calculated policy of deprivation that has led to the deaths of thousands from dehydration and disease that is nothing short of the crime against humanity of extermination, and an act of genocide."

Human Rights Watch accuses Israel of acts of genocide in Gaza over water access. By Raffi Berg, BBC

New international student order met with mixed reaction from university sector. AAP, SBS News

While some university sector bodies welcomed the new order, it was quickly criticised by the Group of Eight (Go8) — an organisation representing some of the nation's leading research-intensive universities.

Group of Eight chief executive Vicki Thomson said the government had replaced "one flawed process with another".

"We run the risk of confusing the international student market with these constant changes to policy settings. For too many potential students, it makes Australia look too hard and too unwelcoming as a higher education destination," she said.

New international student order met with mixed reaction from university sector. AAP, SBS News

European deportation of Syrian refugees – a sign of the times By Xiaochen Su, P&I

Syrians today, Burmese tomorrow?………….

The fluctuating situation today in Syria has parallels with another years-long civil conflict in the heart of Asia. Just as Syria became a kaleidoscope of government and rebel forces after anti-government protests broke out in 2011, the 2021 coup turned Myanmar into a hodgepodge of junta, pro-democracy, and tribal-controlled areas. Nearly 1.4 million Burmese people became refugees in neighbouring states, a much larger population than Syrian refugees in Europe.

European deportation of Syrian refugees – a sign of the times By Xiaochen Su, P&I

New immigration detention subcontractor accused of price-fixing on ADF contracts. By Ariel Bogle and Christopher Knaus, The Guardian

The Asylum Seeker Resource Centre said Labor had previously promised the detention centres would be operated directly by government.

“Contracting a prison operator sends a clear message that detention is punitive,” said the ASRC’s deputy chief executive, Jana Favero. “The human cost of this decision cannot be overstated.”

“We call on the government to honour its commitment and end the use of private companies in detention, starting with the review of this contract and honouring their other platform promise – establishing a parliamentary inquiry into immigration detention.

New Immigration Detention Subcontractor Accused of Price-Fixing on ADF Contracts. By Ariel Bogle And Christopher Knaus, The Guardian

‘Embarrassing’ numbers see Albanese government likely to miss migration reduction target. By Paul Karp, The Guardian

The Albanese government’s plan to slash net migration to 260,000 this financial year is no longer achievable, according to one migration expert, with the rate of decline so far this financial year just over a quarter of what was projected.

Abul Rizvi, a former deputy immigration secretary, predicted a “very embarrassing” few days for the government, with data on Thursday expected to show the 2023-24 net overseas migration forecast was “missed by a long, long way”.

‘Embarrassing’ numbers see Albanese government likely to miss migration reduction target. By Paul Karp, The Guardian

PNG asylum seekers stripped of government-provided housing and healthcare under new deal. By Eden Gillespie, ABC News

The new agreement will force PNG asylum seekers to cover all living expenses with a single allowance.

One prominent advocate is concerned it could drive the men into insecure or unsafe accommodation.

Government-provided accommodation is expected to remain until January 18.

PNG asylum seekers stripped of government-provided housing and healthcare under new deal. By Eden Gillespie, ABC News

Asylum seekers lose housing in PNG. By Karen Middleton, The Saturday Paper (from February 17th, 2024)

Asylum seekers sent to Papua New Guinea by Australia will be stripped of government-provided housing and healthcare under a new deal labelled a “death sentence”.

The asylum seekers were sent to PNG more than a decade ago under an offshore processing deal with Australia (ABC). 

Convenor of the Refugee Action Coalition, Ian Rintoul, says that the agreement is a “death sentence”, and advocates have been unable to find secure accommodation in PNG for less than 1000 kina a week.

The Australian government has not been able to account for $80m paid to support the asylum seekers, after advocates revealed financial assistance stopped more than a year ago.

Asylum seekers lose housing in PNG. By Karen Middleton, The Saturday Paper (from February 17th, 2024)

Labor to pay $2.3bn to controversial US prison operator subsidiary to run onshore detention. By Ariel Bogle & Christopher Knaus, The Guardian

The Australian government will pay $2.3bn to a subsidiary of a controversial American private prison operator to run the nation’s onshore immigration detention network, ending a longstanding deal with Serco.

It has faced serious allegations of misconduct in a series of civil and regulatory cases in the United States, which were revealed by the Guardian last year after MTC won the $420m Nauru contract.

Labor to pay $2.3bn to controversial US prison operator subsidiary to run onshore detention. By Ariel Bogle & Christopher Knaus, The Guardian

Burke making 'feeble' excuses over rescuing Australians in Syria, ex-US ambassador says. By Colin Cosier & Anna Henderson, SBS

A former United States ambassador has criticised the government's "feeble" excuse for not providing more assistance to Australian women and children trapped in northeastern Syria.

Peter Galbraith has travelled to the Kurdish-controlled region twice in the past fortnight to help return two Yazidi children to their mother.

He says both the government and Opposition are exaggerating the danger of sending personnel to help

Burke making 'feeble' excuses over rescuing Australians in Syria, ex-US ambassador says. By Colin Cosier & Anna Henderson, SBS

Women in immigration detention are trapped in a system designed for men. Many have not hugged a family member in years. By Lorraine Finlay, The Guardian

They spoke of limited privacy and widespread exposure to harassment and violence. Of leering men at the gym. Of not having access to the canteen. Of inadequate medical and mental health support. Of living in a constant state of stress and anxiety. Of wanting to turn their lives around, but being banned from work, study or vocational training.

Women in immigration detention are trapped in a system designed for men. Many have not hugged a family member in years. By Lorraine Finlay, The Guardian

Labor says Dutton won’t admit ‘mistake’ after he wouldn’t reaffirm net overseas migration cut. By Paul Karp and Karen Middleton, The Guardian

On Sunday, Dutton declined to reaffirm the commitment in an interview with Sky News, pointing instead to his plans for reducing permanent migration, without confirming numbers for net overseas migration.

“What we’ve said is that we want our migration program to step down in the first two years,” he said. “It will ramp up again in years three and four, and we will bring down the numbers who come through the humanitarian and refugee program, back to the long-run average of that.

“That’s what will work for our country. Again, we’ll have a look at the economic settings, as we said at the time of the policy announcement.”

Labor says Dutton won’t admit ‘mistake’ after he wouldn’t reaffirm net overseas migration cut. By Paul Karp and Karen Middleton, The Guardian

Urgent calls to repatriate 'terrified' Australian women and children from Syria. By Colin Cosier & Anna Henderson, SBS Dateline

A new push to bring home Australian women and children held in Kurdish-controlled Syria has been given added urgency following the weekend fall of Syria’s Bashir al-Assad government , say family members and a children's rights group.
The 42 Australian citizens are detained in camps in a north-eastern pocket of Syria controlled by US-backed Kurdish forces. This region was not taken by the rebel forces that captured the capital, Damascus.

Urgent calls to repatriate 'terrified' Australian women and children from Syria. By Colin Cosier & Anna Henderson, SBS Dateline

UNHCR statement on Australia’s new detention and removal laws, Reliefweb

This statement is attributable to Elizabeth Tan, Director of UNHCR's Division of International Protection.

UNHCR, the UN Refugee Agency, is concerned at the passage of sweeping new laws by the Australian Parliament late last week which will allow for the transfer of people – including refugees, asylum-seekers, and stateless people – to other countries that have been paid to receive them.

UNHCR statement on Australia’s new detention and removal laws, Reliefweb

The Kaldor Centre Oration, 2024

The 2024 Oration

The inaugural Kaldor Centre Oration was delivered by Kate Eastman AM SC and Zaki Haidari on Thursday 21 November 2024 at the Playhouse Theatre, National Institute of Dramatic Art (NIDA), in Sydney Australia. 

Among their many accomplishments, Kate Eastman AM SC is a barrister at New Chambers and a Commissioner at the New South Wales Law Reform Commission, and Zaki Haidari is a refugee rights advocate with Amnesty International.

Their powerful, moving reflections – on the ‘Tampa affair’ and its ramifications for refugees in the years since – are now available as video and podcast recordings for you to revisit and share with others.

The Kaldor Centre Oration, 2024

Australia’s duopoly is cruel, captured and must be destroyed. By Dave Milner, The Shot

Legislation designed so refugees can be warehoused internationally, shipped around to client states for a fee; laws that strip mobile phones from asylum seekers in offshore gulags. Bills that restrict public commentary. Laws designed to keep children away from truth, keeping them safe, not from a world free of climate catastrophe and the hatred that cycles when you support genocide, but from TikTok and Facebook. A moral crusade, sepia-tinted nostalgia, cosy and comfortable. We’ve been here before. 

Australia’s duopoly is cruel, captured and must be destroyed. By Dave Milner, The Shot