Radical Australian Politician Now Targets Muslims

Author: 
Agencies
Publication Date: 
Thu, 2007-08-16 03:00

SYDNEY, 16 August 2007 — Far-right Australian politician Pauline Hanson, who sparked outrage with her 1990s campaign against Asian immigration, said yesterday she would now target Muslims.

The former member of Parliament and leader of the One Nation party is running for a senate seat in elections this year and has applied to register a new party — Pauline’s United Australia Party.

Hanson, 52, made it clear in an interview with the Australian Broadcasting Corporation that her policies have not changed, but that the target has.

“We need to have a look at our immigration levels and I’d like to have a look at putting a moratorium on any more Muslims coming into Australia,” she said. Hanson has also complained that African refugees bring disease into the country. “I think that we need to look at getting out of the 1951 convention of refugees and not being forced into taking refugees in this country that bring in diseases, who are incompatible with our lifestyle,” she said yesterday.

The former fish and chip shop owner was elected to the lower house of Parliament in 1996, and in her maiden speech warned that Australia was in danger of being swamped by Asians. Hanson’s racial views drew international criticism but her One Nation party briefly enjoyed strong support in Australia on issues such as immigration and trade protectionism before she lost her seat in 1998.

She was briefly jailed in 2003 for fraudulently spending electoral funds before the judgment was overturned. Elections are due to be held by the end of the year, but Prime Minister John Howard has not yet announced a date.

Meanwhile, Howard and his ambitious Treasurer Peter Costello moved to publicly quell new leadership tensions yesterday as the government battles to build support ahead of elections.

Howard said he trusted Costello and would continue to work with him after the Treasurer was reported as promising in mid-2005 to destroy Howard’s leadership, telling three senior journalists that Howard could not win another election.

Costello confirmed he attended an off-the-record dinner with three journalists in mid-2005, but he strongly denied he made any comments against Howard or threatened to undermine the Prime Minister’s leadership of the ruling Liberal Party.

“John Howard can win the next election. And John Howard will win the next election,” Costello told Parliament.

Costello has long been Howard’s heir-apparent, but his hopes of taking over as prime minister were crushed in July 2006 when Howard announced he would continue to lead the Liberal Party to try to win a fifth consecutive election.

The new leadership revelations came as the latest Reuters poll analysis found the government clawing back voter support, although Howard’s conservatives still trail the center-left Labor Party with an election due by the end of the year.

After 11 years in office, Howard’s government trails Labor by 9.8 points in August, the Reuters Poll Trend found. Government support was 45.1 percent compared to 54.9 percent for Labor.

The result is Howard’s best since Labor elected Kevin Rudd as its leader in December 2006, and shows Howard has gradually reduced Labor’s poll lead since mid-March, when the government trailed by 19.2 points. Reports of Costello’s 2005 dinner received widespread coverage in the Australian media yesterday, with the three journalists standing by their version of Costello’s comments.

One of the reporters, Michael Brissenden from the government-funded Australian Broadcasting Corporation, produced notes to back his version of the dinner.

The three journalists said they went public to defend their honesty, and said the comments were originally on background, although Costello’s office later asked they be kept secret.

Costello and Howard dismissed the row, with Howard telling reporters there was nothing wrong with Costello having ambitions to one day become prime minister, and promising the two could continue to work effectively. “Costello and I have a wonderful, harmonious, professional relationship,” Howard told reporters. “And I can tell all of you that Costello and I will continue to work together in very close professional harmony.”

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