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Many Australians resent the growing numbers of asylum seekers arriving on Australian shores and the issue has emerged as a major threat to the survival of Gillard's government in elections due in late 2013. The growing death toll from the dangerous voyages has heightened the political imperative to stop the traffic. The Senate in June rejected legislation that would have allowed the government to deport asylum seekers to Malaysia. The Labor Party has wanted to send asylum seekers to Malaysia as part of a swap deal in which Australia would resettle bona fide refugees from Kuala Lumpur registered with the United Nations. The conservative opposition argues that asylum seekers' rights would not be respected by Malaysia because it has not signed the U.N. Refugee Convention. It maintains the detention camps should be in Nauru and Papua New Guinea, where both governments have expressed support. The report recommends the Nauru and Papua New Guinea centers be quickly re-established. It also said that the Malaysian deal needed more work to address human rights concerns, "rather than being discarded or neglected." Opposition immigration spokesman Scott Morrison welcomed the report as an endorsement of his party's policies. But he did not promise the opposition support the government needs to pass the legislation through Parliament. Houston said asylum seekers should spend less than five years in the Australian-commissioned camps.
[Associated
Press;
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