The government has announced further action on the Syrian refugee crisis including 12,000 extra refugee places, more money for the United Nations refugee agency and a bombing mission into Syria. Let's see how people are responding.
Papua New Guinea's Prime Minister, Peter O'Neill, has demanded that people "be a little bit patient" with his country's failure to resettle refugees who were detained on Manus Island, predicting that some will be resettled well before the end of the year.
Mr Abbott is about the leave Canberra for Port Moresby and the Pacific Islands Forum.
(This means Warren Truss will be the Acting Prime Minister.)
The president of Kiribati, Anote Tong, has said that Australia may be asked to leave the Pacific Islands Forum, or face a walkout by small island states, if it attempted to water down a commitment to curb global warming at the meeting.
You can follow the updates on the announcement on Syrian refugeesin this story.
And I recommend spending the time reading this piece by The Age's national affairs editor Tony Wright.
"Those of a mind to do so may chafe at the knowledge that Australia is bombing Syria as it takes its 12,000 refugees from Europe, may debate how and why Mr Abbott came to change his mind about the number of refugees Australia will accept, and may recoil from the incongruity of a nation that grants asylum to some while imprisoning others on distant islands. We might ponder, too, what happens when even more refugees pour into Europe," Tony writes.
"But cynicism deserves a rest day concerning the Abbott government's decision to grant a permanent home to 12,000 desperate people. Having escaped Syria, they might have found no other."