$500 million detention centre savings should be used to increase refugee intakeSome of the $500 million budget savings from
closing immigration detention centres should be reallocated to increasing the
refugee intake, according to the Australian Christian Lobby.
Managing Director Lyle Shelton said this was a big saving off the
budget’s
bottom line and the government should use it to help persecuted religious
minorities fleeing Islamic State in Syria and Iraq.
“Christians, Yazidis and Shia Muslims are among the religious
minorities suffering the most. Now that people smuggling has stopped, Australia
should help some of the victims of religious cleansing.”
Mr Shelton welcomed the fact that for the first time in years, the
quantum of overseas aid money had not been cut or deferred on budget
night.
However he noted that aid to Indonesia and Africa had been
slashed.
“While it is good that the cuts to the quantum have stopped, sadly
Australia has dismally failed to meet its Millennium Development Goal promise to
increase aid to 0.7 per cent of Gross National Income.
“Our current contribution stands at 0.22pc GNI and meeting the MDG
promise of 0.7pc looks increasingly impossible.”
Meanwhile, families with children in childcare had benefitted from
the budget, but single parent families had missed out.
“It’s
disappointing that there is nothing in the budget for single income families who
do not benefit from the increases to the child care rebate. An income splitting
initiative would have been fairer and eased living pressure on families by
doubling the tax free threshold per couple and reducing the marginal tax
rate,” Mr Shelton
said.
Additionally, of note is the $450 million to fight home-grown
extremism and $750 million for military operations in the Middle East fighting
Islamic State.
“Violent religious extremism remains one of the greatest challenges of
our time and extremists have proven to the world that they cannot be reasoned
with. Combatting them is not cheap.”
<저작권자 ⓒ christianreview 무단전재 및 재배포 금지>
|
|