http://presstv.com/Detail/2016/08/03/478240/Australia-Nauru-HRW-Amnesty-refugeeAustralia mistreats refugees as
deterrent: Amnesty, HRW
Australia is following
the intentional inhumane policy of mistreating asylum seekers held on the
South Pacific island of Nauru in a bid to deter others from attempting to sail to
Australia, two prominent human rights groups say.
According to a lengthy joint report by
the Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch (HRW) released on Tuesday,
Canberra’s “failure to address serious abuses appears to be a deliberate policy
to deter further asylum-seekers from arriving in the country by boat.”
Around 1,200 men, women, children, who
sought refuge in Australia but forcibly transferred to the remote island nation
of Nauru suffered “severe abuse, inhumane treatment, and neglect,” it added.
The Republic of Nauru, which has almost
entirely banned journalists to travel to the island, finally allowed Anna
Neistat, a researcher from Amnesty and Michael Bochenek a researcher from HRW
to visit the island for 12 days back in July, despite its reputation for
secrecy.
The researchers then interviewed 84
refugees, from countries including Iraq, Iran, Pakistan and Afghanistan, who
have been trapped in the island’s Australian-funded facility against their
wills. The shocking joint report is mainly based on these interviews, and the
ones with service providers working in the center.
The refugees and asylum seekers “endure
unnecessary delays and at times denial of medical care, even for
life-threatening conditions. Many have dire mental health problems and suffer
overwhelming despair—self-harm and suicide attempts are frequent. All face
prolonged uncertainty about their future,” it further said, adding that they
also faced frequent unpunished assaults, including physical and sexual ones, by
local Nauruans.
Bochenek, a senior counsel on
children’s rights at HRW, said Canberra’s “atrocious treatment” of asylum
seekers on the island over the past three years has taken a huge toll on their
well-being, adding that, "Driving adult and even child refugees to the
breaking point with sustained abuse appears to be one of Australia’s aims on
Nauru.”
Neistat, a senior director for research
at Amnesty, also said that the Australian government had gone to astonishing
lengths to “deliberately inflict suffering” on these ill-fated people, who had
sought safety and freedom, adding that, “Australia's policy of exiling
asylum seekers who arrive by boat is cruel in the extreme.”
Australia denies settlement to
refugees attempting to reach the country by boat. The refugee boats are
intercepted and sent to the remote islands of Christmas and Manus in Papua New
Guinea and Nauru, where they are kept in reportedly inhumane conditions, and
held indefinitely while their refugee applications are processed.
A medical report by the Australian
Human Rights Commission has already said 95 percent of children held
in detention centers showed risks of post-traumatic stress disorder.
Canberra, however, insists that these
people have two choices: either settle in the Pacific islands or return to
their home countries, even if they are found to be refugees, arguing that such
policy of exiling refugees to remote islands has saved lives by removing the
motivation for asylum seekers to attempt the perilous and often deadly ocean
crossing from Indonesia to Australia in rickety boats.
The critics, however, accuse the
government of trading one evil for another.
“People here don’t have a real life. We
are just surviving. We are dead souls in living bodies. We are just husks. We
don’t have any hope or motivation,” one of the interviewed women said.
This is while the Australian government
called the report mere claims and allegations made by the rights groups, adding
that Amnesty had not consulted Australia's Department of Immigration and Border
Protection while preparing the report.
“The department therefore has had no
opportunity to inform itself of these claims and would strongly encourage
Amnesty International to contact the department before airing allegations of
this kind,” said a spokeswoman for the Department to Reuters on Tuesday.
According to Amnesty, Broadspectrum, an
Australian publicly listed corporation, which runs the facility, and
International Health and Medical Services, the main medical service provider
for the refugees in Nauru, denied the allegations when asked for comment.
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