Thousands in Australia protests against refugee centres
Rallies in Sydney and Melbourne call for closure of Pacific island detention centres for Australia's asylum-seekers.
11 Oct 2015
Protesters said the government and Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull should close the Pacific detention centres [AFP] |
Thousands
of Australians joined rallies calling for the closure of Pacific island
camps for asylum-seekers, just days after the government confirmed it
was in talks with the Philippines to resettle detained refugees.
Under
Canberra's tough immigration policy, asylum-seekers attempting to reach
the island continent by boat are turned back or sent to camps on Nauru
or Papua New Guinea and barred from resettling in Australia even if
found to be refugees.
The detention centres are not suitable environments for the health of all detainees, but the effects on children are far worse.
Brian Owler, president of Australian Medical Association
Chanting
"free, free the refugees", the protesters on Sunday in Sydney,
Melbourne and other cities said the government and Australian Prime
Minister Malcolm Turnbull should close the Pacific detention centres,
which have been harshly criticised by rights groups.
With
Australia set to resettle 12,000 Syrian refugees amid the crisis in
Europe, some demonstrators waved Syrian and Kurdish flags and said the
government should move those held in the camps to the mainland.
One
asylum-seeker, "Adbi", who has reportedly been held on Manus Island for
more than two years, called on Turnbull to help the detainees.
"They
are traumatising us," Abdi said on a phone call broadcast to the Sydney
crowd, adding that conditions at the Papua New Guinea facility were
"indescribable".
Medical
professionals at the rallies also expressed fears a new law could block
their colleagues working at the camps from speaking out if they had
allegations of asylum-seekers being abused.
UN
Special Rapporteur on the human rights of migrants Francois Crepeau
last month postponed a visit to Australia due to restrictions on his
access to detention centres and fears that people who spoke to him could
face legal reprisals.
The
rallies came as doctors from the Royal Children's Hospital in Melbourne
told the Sunday Herald Sun newspaper that children should be removed
from the camps, in a move supported by the lobby group, the Australian
Medical Association (AMA).
"The
detention centres are not suitable environments for the health of all
detainees, but the effects on children are far worse," AMA President
Brian Owler said in a statement.
At least 1,589 asylum-seekers are held on Manus Island and Nauru
Some
1,589 asylum-seekers - 1,382 men, 114 women and 93 children - are held
on Manus Island and Nauru, according to immigration figures ending
August 31.
Canberra
has struck a deal with Cambodia to accept refugees in exchange for
millions of dollars in aid over the next four years, although only four
asylum-seekers have so far opted to take up the offer.
Immigration
Minister Peter Dutton said Friday that Australia was in talks with
other countries, including the Philippines, to settle the refugees.
The
government has declared its hardline policy to deter boat arrivals a
success, saying that it has been more than a year since a vessel
carrying asylum-seekers has arrived in the country.
Before the policy was introduced, boats were arriving almost daily, with hundreds drowning en route.
Source: AFP
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