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Peter Dutton takes hard line hit at Labor after ‘undetected’ Indonesian boat carrying 12 people arrives on mainland in WA

A fresh political storm is brewing after an “undetected” boat carrying 12 people arrived in a remote part of the country.

Report of undetected boat arriving in Western Australia

Peter Dutton has called the arrival of a boatload of 12 people in rural Australia a “catastrophic failure” in a hammer attack on the government’s response to asylum seekers.

A fresh political storm is brewing over how a boatload of people arrived “undetected” on the Australian mainland, with the Coalition pressuring the Labor government to explain how a group of people landed on a remote part of the West Australian coast.

The group, understood to be mostly men, were first noticed at remote Mungalalu-Truscott Airbase in the Kimberley region earlier this week.

“There’s been a catastrophic failure here. People are intercepted at sea and turned around and this is the 10th venture. The public is not hearing a lot about it at the moment, but this is the first one to make it to landfall and it should give Australians a lot of reasons to be concerned,” Mr Dutton told 2GB on Friday.

The group were detected at Mungalalu-Truscott Airbase in the remote Kimberley Region.
The group were detected at Mungalalu-Truscott Airbase in the remote Kimberley Region.

It’s not yet known whether the group are fisherman or asylum seekers or how long they had been in the country before they were detected.

The Opposition Leader linked the arrival to a recent High Court decision that ruled that indefinite detention without the prospect of deportation was unlawful, which triggered the release of dozens of asylum seekers into the community.

He shifted blame onto Labor for what he called a “hasty” legislative response to the ruling that he claimed would encourage an uptick in illegal boat arrivals.

“It’s a pull factor for these people smugglers who are selling their wares again. Unfortunately, tragically, people drowned at sea as a result. You don’t know who’s coming into our country.”

Home Affairs Minister Clare O'Neil has been tight-lipped over the boat’s arrival. Picture: NCA NewsWire / Martin Ollman
Home Affairs Minister Clare O'Neil has been tight-lipped over the boat’s arrival. Picture: NCA NewsWire / Martin Ollman

Speaking earlier, Education Minister Jason Clare warned against conflating the High Court decision and the boat arrival incident, arguing they were “two separate matters”.

“There is an investigation going on, we don’t comment on operation matters,” he told Channel 7.

“If people seek to come to Australia by boat, the boat is either turned back, people return to their country of origin, or they are settled in a third country. That was the position of the former government, the same one for our government.”

WA Police have directed inquiries to the Australian Border Force, which refused to provide any detail on transfer plans. The Guardian has reported that the group will be taken by border force authorities to Nauru.

Home Affairs Minister Clare O’Neil has also been contacted for comment.

The Coalition’s home affairs spokesman James Paterson said the government must come clean about what it knows. Picture: NCA NewsWire / Martin Ollman
The Coalition’s home affairs spokesman James Paterson said the government must come clean about what it knows. Picture: NCA NewsWire / Martin Ollman

The opposition’s home affairs spokesman James Paterson claimed the group’s arrival was a sign that Labor “has failed on border security”.

“Under Home Affairs Minister Clare O’Neil and Labor, Australia’s border security is getting worse every month,” he said.

Senator Paterson said Ms O’Neil must “immediately front the media and share with the public what the government knows about these reports”.

ALP president Wayne Swan said what the government was doing was “the normal procedure”.

“The government will process these arrivals, and they will be deported,” he told Channel 9.

“That’s been policy in Australia now for a long time, and talking about it and exaggerating its impact is precisely what the people smugglers want.”

Pressed on whether the arrival was a flaw in border security, Mr Swan said such instances happen “from time to time”.

“This won’t be the first undetected boat and it won’t be the last,” he said.

“But you would be disturbed if there were a flurry of undetected boats. I don’t think there will be.”

Core elements of Operation Sovereign Borders have continued under Labor, namely offshore detention, boat turnbacks and takebacks when feasible and a ban on refugees or asylum seekers who arrived after 2013 settling in Australia.

Read related topics:Peter Dutton

Original URL: https://www.news.com.au/national/politics/labor-under-fire-after-undetected-indonesian-boat-carrying-12-people-arrives-on-mainland-in-wa/news-story/8198dbb034dca624705fe04a254a2521