Australia meeting obligations at centres: PM

Tony Abbott says Australia is meeting its international obligations when it comes to the standard of its offshore detention centres.

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(File: AAP)

Prime Minister Tony Abbott has defended the standard of the country's offshore detention centres, saying the government won't apologise for them not being five-star hotels.

International bodies such as the United Nations and Amnesty International have been scathing of the centres at Nauru and Manus Island, raising concerns about the treatment of asylum seekers and their health and welfare.

But Mr Abbott said those housed at the offshore detention facilities were there "because he or she has come illegally to Australia by boat".

"We don't apologise for the fact that they're not five-star or even three-star hotels, nevertheless we are confident we are well and truly discharging our humanitarian obligations," he told Network Ten on Friday.

"People are housed, they're clothed, they're given medical attention. They're kept as safe as we can make it for them."

With News Corp reporting as many as five asylum seeker boats have been towed or turned back to Indonesian waters in the past month, the prime minister was again questioned about the secrecy surrounding the government's border operations.

He said the public wanted the boats stopped, and "that's my determination".

"If stopping the boats means being criticised because I'm not giving information that would be of use to people smugglers, so be it," he said.

Mr Abbott offered a stern warning to those attempting to enter Australia by boat, saying they had to "come the right way and not the wrong way".

"My message to people trying to come in the back door, `you will find it closed'," he said.

Despite saying most asylum seekers were economic refugees, the prime minister did accept they were coming from countries where life was harder than Australia.

"I can accept the yearning, indeed I can cherish the yearning for a better life that beats in the hearts of every human being, I can accept that," he said, when asked if he felt sorry for asylum seekers.

"But I have a responsibility to the citizens of Australia to keep our country secure, to keep our borders safe, and that's what I have to discharge."


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Source: AAP


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