Everybody acknowledges the abhorrent, barbaric acts that were witnessed on Four Corners.
Everybody acknowledges that those abattoirs, if they could even be called that, which were responsible for the inhumane treatment of cattle, should not be given the right to process Australian cattle. It was quite evident however that there are abattoirs in Indonesia that do the right thing and this sweeping ban against the live export of cattle to Indonesia has punished the good and the bad. In fact it has taken a swipe against the Indonesians as a group. It will not achieve better animal husbandry it will merely antagonise our neighbour. If we want a genuine approach to better humane practises then we must remain engaged on terms that are encouraging discussion not intimidation.
Labor talks of a regional approach to refugee processing: does this involve insulting your nearest and most important ally in this process? Labor has managed to start from a point where there was a broad consensus across the parties, across the communities and across borders and has created a parochial, clumsy, broad brush approach which leaves Northern Australia without an industry, Indonesian abattoir workers from compliant abattoirs that had been doing the right thing without a job, Indonesians on the street without beef and Indonesian protagonists against stronger bilateral relationships on human trafficking with real working political ammunition against us.