World Immigration News

Australia should be generous, not punitive, when it comes to those seeking to escape war

Release Date
2026-03-14
Media
The Guardian
Summary
The article argues that Australia’s immigration and refugee policies reveal a contradiction in the context of war and displacement.

It first notes that Australia’s increasing integration with the U.S. military—through bases and deployments such as those in Darwin and HMAS Stirling—may make the country a potential target in conflicts, rather than guaranteeing its security. In war, military facilities become targets, but civilians are often killed as well, as shown by historical examples from World War II and recent conflicts.

At the same time, the Australian government has taken inconsistent approaches to people fleeing war. While it granted humanitarian visas to several Iranian women footballers to ensure their safety, it also cancelled about 19,000 temporary visas issued to people from Israel, Lebanon, and Iran, fearing they might overstay due to the war. The author criticizes this as contradictory, arguing that it is natural for people whose homes are under attack to seek refuge elsewhere.

The article also recalls historical precedents. In the 1930s, Australia refused many refugees fleeing Nazi Germany, and during the war Jewish anti-fascist refugees sent from Britain were interned as “enemy aliens.” Many of them later contributed significantly to Australian society.

The author concludes that Australia’s immigration system has long punished people forced to flee their homelands and that selectively deciding who deserves asylum exposes a form of hypocrisy. In times of war, countries should be prepared to offer refuge rather than exclusion.
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Australia

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