Humanitarian Malcolm Fraser, former PM who opened Australia to Asia, dead at 84

Australia’s former conservative prime minister Malcolm Fraser, who died yesterday aged 84, was seen as a voice for human rights who oversaw an upsurge in immigration from Asia.
His humanitarian views would later see him part sharply with his conservative colleagues, who imposed a harsh immigration policy intended to deter asylum seekers arriving by boat.
A sharp intellect and prolific tweeter whose last comments related to the role of China, Israeli politics and the cricket World Cup among other issues, Fraser came to power in the tumultuous events of 1975.
He became caretaker prime minister after the representative of Britain’s Queen Elizabeth II, governor-general Sir John Kerr, dismissed the previous Labor government in Australia’s greatest constitutional crisis.
But he went on to win the largest landslide of any national election in the country a month later, and remained in office until 1983.
“Those who recall the manner of his election discouragingly should remember Malcolm as a liberal on issues of race and human rights,” said senior Liberal backbencher Philip Ruddock.