Refugee rights groups call for end of offshore processing as 40 asylum seekers sent to Nauru

February 21, 2024
Issue 
Nauru offshore detention
Forty asylum seekers have been taken to the island of Nauru to be processed in offshore detention. Photo: Wikimedia Commons

Amnesty International (AI) Australia and refugee rights groups said the 40 people聽who recently sought asylum in Western Australia should be brought back to the mainland.

The asylum seekers, understood to be from Pakistan and Bangladesh, have been taken to Nauru.

, AI Australia spokesperson, said on February 19 that Labor must 鈥渓isten to the human rights experts, medical professionals, legal advocates and the majority of the Australian public who denounce offshore detention as being unsafe, inhumane and unacceptable鈥.

鈥淒etaining asylum seekers offshore is a dead-end policy of cruelty," Thom said. "After 10 years, hundreds of people who sought asylum in Australia suffer irreparable damage from their time on Nauru and Manus Island.鈥

鈥淭here are still 55 people who remain in PNG without permanent resettlement. The federal government must not condemn a new cohort of people to a policy that鈥檚 long been disgraced and discarded.鈥

Helen Panopoulos, Refugee Action Collective (Victoria) spokesperson, is calling on Labor to abandon its racist, cruel, inhumane and dangerous鈥 policy of offshore detention and boat turn-backs.

鈥淥peration Sovereign Borders is a bipartisan approach to refugee and asylum policy and practice in Australia,鈥 she said. 鈥淪ending people offshore has proven deadly for some鈥, a reference to the 10th anniversary of the murder of 24-year-old Reza Barati, who died on Manus Island while under the protection of Australia.聽聽

Panopoulos said that while 21 people have died in offshore detention, the Refugee Council of Australia (RCOA) said 鈥渃ountless others have suffered and continue to suffer from medical neglect and deterioration of their mental health鈥.

Panopoulos said the recent asylum seekers came from Indonesia, 鈥渨here almost 14,000 refugees have been languishing for nearly a decade with no rights鈥 鈥 the result of immigration minister Scott Morrison鈥檚 decision in 2014 that no one found to be a refugee by the United Nations High Commission for Refugees in Indonesia would ever be resettled in Australia.

She said by the assistant secretary of Home Affairs to the Administrative Appeals Tribunal at the end of January showed that millions of dollars had been wasted in the offshore detention regime.

A 聽by Dennis Richardson, examining offshore detention 鈥渋ntegrity issues鈥, said improvements in 鈥渋dentifying foreign bribery and corruption鈥 is needed.

It made four recommendations (the fourth being redacted) focusing on transparency and accountability, and did not refer any individual to the Australian Federal Police or National Anti-Corruption Commission.

Panopoulos said the public has 鈥渓imited ability to monitor the way people are treated and whether their human rights are being protected鈥 in offshore detention.

鈥淎sylum seekers remain extremely vulnerable under these conditions,鈥 she said.

RCOA wants a royal commission into Australia鈥檚 detention regime, and repeated this call after Richardson鈥檚 report was released.

It said Independent MP Kylea Tink鈥檚 , introduced in November, 鈥減rovides a clear path forward in ensuring that detention is only used when necessary and for the shortest time possible鈥.

It introduces a 90-day limit on immigration detention and prohibits minors from being imprisoned. RCOA spokesperson Paul Power said the bill 鈥渁ligns with the Australian Labor Party鈥檚 national platform which commits Labor to enshrining a 鈥90 day rule鈥 on detention, regularly reviewing decisions to detain and ensuring children are not held in immigration detention鈥.

Tink said when introducing her bill that 鈥淎ustralia鈥檚 immigration regime is unique in the world: uniquely cruel and a unique denial of basic human rights鈥.

She said there had been at least 37 suicides related to immigration detention in the past 10 years and, over the same period, the detention regime had cost $9.7 billion, with offshore processing expected to cost $485 million in 2024.

Power said only a royal commission into the use of immigration detention can show a clear way forward. The Richardson report confirms just how urgent such a commission of inquiry is, he said.

ROCA said the 鈥渨hatever it takes鈥 mentality of successive Australian governments to offshore detention for more than 20 years and 鈥渢he apparent limited oversight鈥 by ministers and senior officials of the day-to-day policy 鈥渉ave created room for the corrupt dealings鈥 highlighted by the Richardson report.

You need 麻豆传媒, and we need you!

麻豆传媒 is funded by contributions from readers and supporters. Help us reach our funding target.

Make a One-off Donation or choose from one of our Monthly Donation options.

Become a supporter to get the digital edition for $5 per month or the print edition for $10 per month. One-time payment options are available.

You can also call 1800 634 206 to make a donation or to become a supporter. Thank you.