Mighty Caty
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You keep conflating two different concepts, which would explain your confusion.
-- A refugee applicant, once in detention or granted, must comply with the laws of a country. but the initial arrival will often be illegal.
The 1951 convention only works for refugee, not the person who seeking the refugee. So, as i said, the Article 31 is after the fact that the person cannot be punished for the illegal entry after his successful claim of the refugee status.
There are no articel in 1951 convention and 1967 protocol stating any right on people claiming refugee status.
-- Most of your points directly reinforce the view that an applicant must be given time to make his/her case rather than peremptory deportation.
This is because there are no provision to people who seek refugee status, can you show me which part of 1951 convention, 1967 protocol and any precedent and case ruling, judgment that expressly forbit any country turning refugee seeker around?
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-- A signatory to the Convention can NOT deport a person to a country where their rights would be threatened due to illegal entry. Australia pushing them into Indonesia constitutes as "illegal entry" into Indonesia.
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This is doublely wrong. Even for a refugee who gain refugee status, a signatory coutnry can remove, expel him if a due process is given, covered by the article 32 and 33.
And those people, once again, are not refugee, they are seeking refugee.
And i again call for any article written in 1951 Convention, 1967 protocol and case ruling and precedent if you have to say it is otherwise.
That was a mission statement,-- Regarding indirect arrival in Sweden,
Sweden must take its share of the responsibility for the international protection of refugees. An important part of this responsibility is to provide protection - through resettlement in Sweden - for people fleeing in a third country who do not have access to any other permanent solution.
What is a third country means??
Any other EU member? (Which is actually implied on the paragraph, if you care to read them throught)
Any other country?
The sentense said, if a refugee come fomr the land of threat and to a second country, and if that country cannot provide a permanent solution (Whis is what it said by the bolded part), then sweden would take the responsibility.
That can mean any number of things, as each country have a quote for refugee intake (UNHCR set the quota to 5%) so, if a refugee is housed in say Finland, but Finland's quota for that year is used up, then it would be sweden responsibility to take that refugee if Swedish own quota was still not filled, you can read it from the same statement
All EU Member States must share the responsibility for offering protection to refugees. If Sweden has to shoulder a disproportionate share of the responsibility for refugee situations around the world in relation to comparable countries, this will eventually raise questions about the sustainability of our asylum system.
The problem is, this is what they say they will do, but this does not actually mean anything.
What I wrote above.
Their reintroduction into Indonesian territory is illegal, since Australian Navy has no way to know if they have a valid Indonesian visa. In fact, the Australian Navy is breaking Indonesian border laws, as well as the UNHCR Convention's rules regarding sending people to countries where their rights might be in jeopardy due to their illegal status.
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Please do show me which part make the Australian Reintroduction those refugee seeker to Indonesia illegal
Are there any convention written, case ruling and precedent to support your word?
I have quote all the article and common law to support my argument, i think you should do the same
I think the UN has already provided interpretation of the word "directly" in the convention to clear any ambiguation~
Transiting through Indonesia is still considered "coming directly" per UN interpretation, even more, there are no time limit for how long the period of transiting is still count as"direct" and each must be judged based on merits.
"The expression "coming directly" in Article 31(1), covers the situation of a person who enters the country in which asylum is sought directly from the country of origin, or from another country where his protection, safety and security could not be assured. It is understood that this term also covers a person who transits an intermediate country for a short period of time without having applied for, or received, asylum there. No strict time limit can be applied to the concept "coming directly" and each case must be judged on its merits. Similarly, given the special situation of asylum-seekers, in particular the effects of trauma, language problems, lack of information, previous experiences which often result in a suspicion of those in authority, feelings of insecurity, and the fact that these and other circumstances may vary enormously from one asylum seeker to another, there is no time limit which can be mechanically applied or associated with the expression "without delay". The expression " good cause", requires a consideration of the circumstances under which the asylum-seeker fled. The term "asylum-seeker" in these guidelines applies to those whose claims are being considered under an admissibility or pre-screening procedure as well as those who are being considered under refugee status determination procedures. It also includes those exercising their right to seek judicial and/or administrative review of their asylum request."
Then i want to ask you, how do you determine if the Asylum seeker is not just transiting Australia and coming to another country??
The problem is, you need to be judged case by case on its own merit. You cannot just say, "I want to go to Australia and apply for asylum there" and say ok, then you are just transiiting throught Indonesia. That is because Indonesian Government cannot guarantee that once those people arrive in Australia, they won't say "I am just going to New Zealand and i am just transiting thru Australia"
The key issue is judge by its own merit, and that is not the Australian authority job when the asylum seeker claiming they want to go to Australia when they are in indonesia. To pursance to this clause, Indonesian government would need to judge each case by its own merit, to see if they are indeed only transit thru indonesia to Austrlaia
An act which Indonesian Government did not do
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