CANBERRA, Australia — Tony Abbott was sworn in as Australia's new prime minister on Wednesday and promised immediate action to slow the stream of asylum seekers arriving by boats from Indonesia and to dismantle the previous administration's clean energy policies. Abbott was the first of 42 government executives to be sworn in by Governor General Quentin Bryce at a ceremony at Government House in the capital Canberra. He has been criticized for including only one woman in his 19-member Cabinet, Foreign Minister Julie Bishop — who will be Australia's first woman named to that post. His conservative party defeated former Prime Minister Kevin Rudd's center-left Labor Party in Sept. 7 elections. “Today is not just a ceremonial day, it's an action day,” Abbott said in a statement. Abbott's leadership team had already begun exercising control. Two days after the election, Bishop canceled the previous government's appointment of Steve Bracks, a former Labor state premier, to consul-general to New York. Abbott also announced that Australia's contentious new policy on asylum seekers that includes turning back their boats to Indonesia begins on Wednesday after the swearing in ceremony. Australia has seen an increase in the number of such asylum seekers from Iran, Afghanistan, Pakistan and other countries, many of whom pay smugglers up to $10,000 to get them to Australia from Indonesian ports The incoming government announced on Tuesday that deputy army chief, Maj. Gen. Angus Campbell, had been appointed to lead Australia's new border protection policy, Operation Sovereign Borders. Campbell will be promoted to lieutenant general in this new role. The new policy, which has been criticized by Indonesian officials, also includes buying fishing boats from Indonesian villages to prevent them falling into the hands of people smugglers. Australian officials would also pay villages for information about people smugglers under another controversial aspect to the policy. Acting opposition leader Chris Bowen on Wednesday said the plan would cause problems with the countries' close relationship. “Mr. Abbott has told us he wants a Jakarta-based foreign policy at the same time as saying to Jakarta we don't care what you think, this is what we're doing,” Bowen told Australian Broadcasting Corp. “This is a recipe, frankly, for ongoing problems in relation to boats arriving in Australia — it's [a] recipe for ongoing dispute with Indonesia about this issue.” — AP