Eighty-one asylum-seekers arrived at the remote Curtin Immigration Detention Centre in Western Australia, a spokesman for the facility said, after they were reportedly flown there by the government from the remote atoll of Cocos Islands in the Indian Ocean.
The boatpeople, thought to be mostly minority ethnic Tamils from Sri Lanka, were the first in seven months to reach the Australian mainland.
More of the asylum-seekers were reportedly expected to arrive at the detention centre tomorrow.
The Australian government said Friday the asylum-seekers, including children, would be held on the mainland until Indian consular officials could confirm their nationalities and arrange where possible for them to return to India.
The relocations came ahead of a High Court hearing in early August, where lawyers acting for about one-third of those who had been on the boat were set to argue that any transfer to Colombo in Sri Lanka would be illegal.
Refugee activist Ian Rintoul hailed the arrival of the asylum-seekers in Australia and urged the government to release them into the community while their protection claims were being processed.
Greens senator Sarah Hanson-Young, a strong critic of the government's immigration policies, said earlier today she would travel to the Curtin facility in the next few days to check on the welfare of the children in the group.
Abbott said yesterday that those who come to Australia illegally by boat will "never ever get permanent residency".
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