Controversial Dutch MP postpones Australia visit
By chief political correspondent Simon Cullen
ABCNews
Anti-Islamic Dutch politician Geert Wilders has postponed a visit to Australia because of delays in obtaining a visa, despite today's announcement that his application would be approved.
Immigration Minister Chris Bowen said he had decided to issue a visa to the controversial MP, declaring Australia's democracy is strong enough to withstand a visit by the "extremist commentator".
Mr Wilders was due to speak at events in Sydney and Melbourne later this month at the invitation of the Q Society, which is concerned by what it calls the "Islamisation" of Australia.
But the group says "extraordinary delays" in getting a visa have forced Mr Wilders to delay his visit until mid-February next year.
"Minister Bowen's (announcement)... is too little too late," the Q Society said in a statement.
"When Mr Wilders' visa may be issued is still uncertain; it could be tomorrow, it could be next week, it could be a week after the scheduled departure.
"Q Society asks Minister Bowen why, after lodging papers in late August, has his visa still not been issued?"
A spokesman for Mr Bowen says Mr Wilders was advised by email this morning that his visa application had been approved.
Q Society's spokesman Andrew Horwood has told the ABC that Mr Wilders' speaking tour may now be expanded to include Perth given the strong public interest.
"We've been really inundated by what I'd call the silent majority in Australia who've been looking back and concerned about what's been happening," Mr Horwood said.
Last month, the ABC's 7.30 program reported the processing of the Dutch MP's visa had stalled because it triggered a notification on the Movement Alert List - a database of people of concern to Australia.
It meant his application was held up at the Department of Immigration headquarters in Canberra while more thorough checks were done.
But Mr Bowen this morning announced that after long and careful consideration, he would not be intervening in the process to stop Mr Wilders coming to Australia.
"I've taken the view that he's a provocateur who would like nothing more than for me to reject his visa so that he could become a cause célèbre ," Mr Bowen told ABC radio's AM program.
"I'm not going to give him that opportunity to be the cause célèbre for his cause which is radical and extremist.
"I think our society's robust enough, our multicultural is strong enough, and our love of freedom of speech entrenched enough that we can withstand a visit from this fringe commentator from the other side of the world.
"We should defeat his ideas with the force of our ideas and the force of our experience, not by the blunt instrument of keeping him out of Australia."
As one of the world's most prominent anti-Islam campaigners, Mr Wilders has attracted controversy in many parts of the world.
In 2009 he was refused entry to the UK but later appealed and won.
He was also tried and acquitted in the Netherlands on hate charges over his controversial public comments.
The website for the Q Society, which invited Mr Wilders to Australia, states that: "Aggressive or stealth proselytising and brazen imposition by Islamic organisations and Islamic religious fanatics were our 'call to arms'".
And it has accused the Federal Government of "kowtowing to Islamic supremacists".