Australia’s Veterans Want Medivac Law Scrapped, Says Dutton

Australia’s Veterans Want Medivac Law Scrapped, Says Dutton
Australia's Foreign Affairs Minister Peter Dutton during Question Time in the House of at Parliament House in Canberra, Australia, on Sept. 11, 2019. (Tracey Nearmy/Getty Images)
AAP
By AAP
10/17/2019
Updated:
10/18/2019

Australia’s Home Affairs Minister Peter Dutton says that the country’s war veterans want refugee medical evacuation laws scrapped.

Dutton is locked in negotiations with Tasmanian senator Jacqui Lambie, herself an army veteran, as he seeks to repeal the so-called medivac laws.

The minister is confident he’s made a “pretty compelling case” as Senator Lambie awaits a committee report.

“In a way, she looks through the lens of what would a veteran think or what would a veteran want me to do in relation to these matters,” he told 2GB radio on Oct. 10.

“I believe very strongly that most Australians and certainly the vast majority of veterans would want us to abolish this law.”

The laws make it easier for migrants held in Nauru and Papua New Guinea to be transferred to Australia for emergency medical treatment.

The changes passed against the right-leaning Coalition government’s wishes earlier this year with support from left-leaning Labor and the crossbench.

The scheme only applies to those already held offshore and does not extend to new arrivals.

Even so, Senator Lambie has indicated the situation in Syria could sway her vote on repealing the medivac laws, raising concerns the Middle East conflict could trigger an influx of migrants.

“If you’re a people smuggler, why wouldn’t you be marketing this? That’s exactly what’s happening,” Dutton said.

The medivac laws allow the minister to stop transfers based on national security grounds.

However, the minister says there are loopholes in the legislation that give rapists, murderers, and pedophiles a free pass into Australia.

“Certainly there is a very narrow path of opportunity to stop people of bad character coming into our country under the laws Labor passed,” Dutton said. “We want to abolish these laws as quickly as possible.”

“Six people have already come under Labor’s medivac laws that should not have come,” he told reporters in Canberra.

“They were people of very questionable character. I have made a decision in relation to a seventh individual where I believe I do have grounds to stop that person from coming to Australia.

“But I suspect that will be tested in the courts and I think we should wait and see what the courts have to say.”

A Senate committee investigating the repeal bill is due to release its report on Friday.

The government-dominated committee is guaranteed to support the repeal, with opposition parties expected to hand down dissenting reports.

By Daniel McCulloch