The Rudd Governmentâs new policy on asylum seekers is morally bankrupt and unworthy of a civilized community, according to the Reverend Andrew Palmer from the Association of Baptist Churches.
Instead of slamming the door and turning our backs on those in need, we should welcome and assist them to make a new life in the country of their choice,â Rev Palmer said.
âWe join with other Christian Churches in condemning the Rudd Governmentâs announcement of a policy which expands offshore processing at enormous cost to Australian taxpayers, and removes any possibility of asylum seekers who come by boat from being resettled in Australia,â he said.
The new policy places innocent children in danger of serious physical and psychological harm in sub-standard, temporary and overcrowded detention facilities in Papua New Guinea.
Australia accepts less than 0.3 per cent of the worldâs refugees, and around 90 per cent of asylum seekers who arrive here by boat are found to have valid claims for refugee status.
Full statement here:http://www.australianchurchesrefugeetaskforce.com.au/rudds-asylum-policy-morally-bankrupt/
Uniting Church laments gross failure of compassion on asylum seekers
The Uniting Church in Australia has expressed its deep concern over the latest round of policy amendments designed to punish asylum seekers arriving by boat.
President of the Uniting Church Assembly Rev Dr Andrew Dutney spoke of his dismay at the extreme abdication of responsibility demonstrated by the new arrangements announced by Prime Minister Rudd.
"We now see firmly entrenched in our political system an approach that seeks to circumvent the spirit of hospitality and compassion codified in international treaties and obligations," said Dr Dutney.
"Denying refugees the possibility of settlement in Australia denies them hope and will have a devastating impact on those who have fled persecution.
More info: http://www.journeyonline.com.au/showArticle.php?articleId=383
Â
AUSTRALIAN CATHOLIC BISHOPS CONFERENCE
The Human Dignity of Asylum Seekers comes before National Interests
22 July 2013
Media Release
The Australian Catholic Migrant and Refugee Office call for Australiaâs asylum seeker policies to be inspired by the centrality of human dignity and the obligation to care for our brothers and sisters who, in their desperation, ask for our welcome and assistance.
"Each and every one of us must rise above indifference and have the courage to open our hearts to asylum seekers, to listen to their hopes, to empathise with their despair, and to welcome them into our community." said Bishop Gerard Hanna, Australian Catholic Bishopâs Delegate for Migrants and Refugees.
"Our thoughts and active involvement is accompanied by our prayerful support for these people who have endured so much in the hope of making a life for themselves in Australia and who will now be denied this opportunity" said Bishop Hanna.
"The new resettlement arrangements with Papua New Guinea are based on the premise that it is wrong for people fleeing from persecution to seek asylum in Australia" said Bishop Hanna "this is fundamentally untrue."
"We have the duty as members of one human family to help those who arrive on our shores seeking asylum and to strive with all our resources to assist them no matter how inconvenient this may prove to be." he said.
"We also share the concerns raised by the Catholic Bishops Conference of Papua New Guinea and Solomon Islands" said Bishop Hanna "that Australia is asking the people of Papua New Guinea to show a level of generosity far beyond their economic means."
"An alternative way to prevent tragedies at sea is to accept more refugees from source countries and provide the possibility and the hope of reaching Australia through a regular legal pathway" said Fr PettenĂ National Director of ACMRO and Consulter of the Pontifical Council for the Pastoral Care of Migrants and Itinerant People.
"At the root cause of forced migration is the failure of various Nations to uphold human rights and respect human dignity" said Fr PettenĂ "the ultimate solution is to seek justice, up hold the rule of law and encourage all other Nations to do likewise."
"Full respect and care for asylum seekers must come before the National and political interests of any country" he said "importantly in this context, we must uphold our international human rights obligations under the 1951 Refugee Convention."
For media enquiries, please contact Joe Moloney (02) 6201 9848

Comments
Media 15 August
Internal disquiet bubbles over Labor's tough asylum policy The Age
PNG businesses unhappy over Manus Island building contracts ABC Online
 Immigration Minister Tony Burke says discussions with asylum ... ABC Online
Â
 Claims of daily breach of PNG constitution Islands Business
Media 16 August
PNG Prime Minister Peter O'Neill says he has not agreed to settle all asylum seekers who are found to be refugees after processing on Manus Island. Sydney Morning Herald
PNG businesses say they've been overlooked for asylum seeker construction contracts ABC Online - Whatever the politics of it, the Federal Government's plan to expand processing facilities for asylum seekers on Manus Island is big business. Contracts for construction and logistics have been awarded worth hundreds of millions of dollars to several companies.
Abbott correct on Pacific Solution outcome ABC Online
Australia sends more men to asylum seeker camp in PNG Radio New Zealand International
ASYLUM seekers and public invited to join constitutional challenge in PNG NEWS.com.au
Media 17 August
PNG rejects it will settle refugees Herald Sun
Media 18 August
Faith: Would Jesus stop the boats? WA today
Media 19 August
Boatpeople backing up as solution leaves 2000 in Christmas Island limbo The Australian
Second PNG legal challenge to Manus centre News Limited - A CONSTITUTIONAL challenge to Australia's tough border protection policy will be taken up in Papua New Guinea's Supreme Court on Tuesday, with lawyers expected to push for access to detainees housed on Manus Island.
NGOs are calling for the quarantining of the aid budget and not to waste it on programmes such as the PNG solution. - theguardian.com,
Â
Media 20 August
Aboriginal youth urge compassion for asylum seekers The Tracker
Christians are labelling someone morally bankrupt?
Well, yes, they are morally bankrupt. But so are most of the 'Christian' churches. Slamming the door on people? How about gay people? Are you worried about the risk of psychological harm to children who are gay and whose parents are 'Christian'? Having had my little rant, asylum seekers are human beings just like us, surprise surprise.
Open Letter to the Prime Minister and Leader of the Opposition
2nd September 2013
Letter to the Editor
An Open Letter to the Prime Minister and the Leader of the Opposition.
In our collective living memories it is a rare occurrence that both people vying for Office are regular Church going Christians. It is extraordinary to us as practising Christians and a matter of shame therefore, that both of you are determined to win office by continuing cruel, oppressive and wasteful policies towards the Aboriginal and Islander First Peoples, towards desperate Refugees and Asylum Seekers , and also by deliberate disregard for the perilous state of the Earth under global warming.
Itâs incredible to us that whoever wins Government, from the lofty heights of membership of the UN Security Council, Australia will be pointing out human rights abuses in other countries.
Do unto others as you would have them do unto you.â(Matthew 7/12 )
âWelcome the stranger.â (Matthew 25/36) â
âTake care of the Earth â(Genesis 2/16)
We donât think so.
signed
Dr Alitya Rigney, Kaurna Elder
(Sisters) Robert Aitken, Joan Evans, Alice Foley, Margaret Kenny, Marion Gambin, Rebecca Scanlan, Susan Pollard, Kenise Neill, Marie Faulkner and Maureen McGuire
for the Josephite SA Reconciliation circle