Refugee intake to surge under Greens plan

The number of asylum seekers resettled in Australia would surge to 50,000 each year under a new plan by the Greens.

Australian Greens leader Richard Di Natale

Australian Greens leader Richard Di Natale. Source: AAP

The number of asylum seekers resettled in Australia would rise dramatically under a new Greens proposal.

Under the plan, to be launched on Saturday, 40,000 asylum seekers would be resettled on humanitarian grounds every year - an increase by about 26,000 taken in by Australia in 2014-15.

A further 10,000 would be taken in as part of a skills program, while offshore detention facilities on Manus Island and Nauru would be shut.

"Australia doesn't need to respond to people seeking our protection by turning our backs or locking them up," Greens leader Richard Di Natale said in a statement.

Greens immigration spokesperson Sarah Hanson-Young said closing offshore detention facilities enabled the program to be "cost-neutral".

"Closing down Manus and Nauru would save almost $3 billion dollars," she told Sky News on Saturday.

"That is an awful lot of money to keep 2000 people - men, women and children - detained on those island camps."

Labor has expressed concern with the policy, saying it could lead to an opening of seaways.

Federal Opposition Leader Bill Shorten said a clear message had to be sent to people smugglers against sending people to Australia by boat.

"There is no compassion in rewarding people smugglers and their business model to entice vulnerable people onto unsafe boats, then they drown at sea," he said.


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Source: AAP



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