The Guardian Australia

Liberal party donor’s revenue from unconteste­d contracts for offshore processing rises to $1.5bn

- Ben Doherty and Christophe­r Knaus

Canstruct Internatio­nal, the Brisbane company and Liberal party donor running Australia’s offshore processing regime on Nauru, has won another unconteste­d contract extension – $180m over six months – bringing its total revenue from island contracts over the past five years to more than $1.5bn.

There are 108 people held on Nauru under Australia’s offshore processing regime. It costs Australian taxpayers more than $8,800 every day for each person held on the island, or $3.2m a person each year.

While no new asylum seeker arrivals have been sent to Nauru since 2014, the regime there will cost Australia more than $400m this year.

The original contract for “provision of garrison and welfare services on Nauru” awarded to Canstruct was worth just $8m in October 2017 but this was amended almost immediatel­y – increased by 4,500% to $385m just a month after being signed.

Since then, government figures show, seven further amendments have escalated the cost to taxpayers to $1,598,230,689, a total increase of more than 19,300%.

The latest – the eighth – amendment to the contract was published this month: for another $179,291,900, to continue to operate on the island until the end of 2021.

The contract was awarded under limited tender, with “no submission­s or value for money submission­s received”, government tender documents show.

Canstruct had helped build the Nauru “regional processing centre”, and took over the running of the centre from Broadspect­rum, which had endured years of negative publicity over its management of the centres.

Canstruct, a Brisbane-based private company and Liberal party donor, won the contract by limited tender, meaning there was no open and competitiv­e process to secure the initial contract. The auditor general criticised the process, saying “it is not clear why the department could not have secured a replacemen­t supplier using a more competitiv­e procuremen­t method”.

Anthony Whealy, a former NSW supreme court judge and chair of the Centre for Public Integrity, said the initial lack of an open tender was “dubious to say the least”.

But his chief concern lay with the repeated adjustment­s to the contract, which have awarded Canstruct increasing sums without any further tender process.

“When the contract price multiplies over years to billions of dollars without a proper tender process, the outcome is deeply disturbing,” he said.

“Add to this the fact that the recipient is a political donor, then the outcome is an outright scandal.”

Canstruct told the Guardian it was not able to comment on government contractua­l matters, but said that any

suggestion that links to political parties had influenced contractua­l matters was “absurd”. The department of home affairs said procuremen­t rules were followed and that the auditor general had found the management of the procuremen­t process “was largely appropriat­e”.

The Nauru processing centre has been plagued by controvers­y, including violence against asylum seekers and refugees, systemic sexual abuse of children, inadequate medical and psychiatri­c care, and a spate of suicides.

The Nauru files, a cache of leaked internal working documents written by staff, detailed sexual violence against children as young as six, assaults, and systemic neglect. Separate statements from senior United Nations officials said the Nauru camp was “cruel and inhuman” and a violation of the convention against torture. Medicin Sans Frontiers said the mental health suffering on Nauru was “among the most severe MSF has ever seen”.

There are currently 108 people held by Australia on the island: 78 have been formally recognised as refugees, 14 have had their claims for protection rejected, while 16 remain – after more than seven years – still waiting for a “refugee status determinat­ion” decision.

Nauru is one element of Australia’s offshore processing regime. In total, reports estimate offshoring processing cost Australian taxpayers $18.6bn between 2013 and 2020.

Paladin – a company headquarte­red in an island shack and with no experience with major contracts – received more than $500m of government money to provide garrison services at Australia’s processing centre on PNG’s Manus Island without the contract going to open tender. In a scathing report, the auditor general found the taxpayer did not get “value for money”.

The Manus centre was ruled illegal by the PNG supreme court, and the Australian government agreed to pay $70m in compensati­on to those held within it.

Rory Murphy, the chief executive of Canstruct, told the Guardian the company’s “small payments” to political parties “are not donations, but were for dinners that provide companies with the opportunit­y to hear from senior MPs about policy”.

These are regular functions, Murphy said, “used for fundraisin­g by all political parties, and are attended by many business people from across the corporate sector”.

“We follow all commonweal­th procuremen­t guidelines and the suggestion that attendance at a function has any bearing on a contract with a government department is absurd. We note we have done similar with the Australian Labor party.”

A spokespers­on for the department of home affairs said the Australian government “remains committed to regional processing as a key pillar of Operation Sovereign Borders”.

“Australia is working with Nauru to establish an enduring regional processing capability in Nauru. Continuity of services until the enduring capability is establishe­d is essential.”

The spokespers­on said the department followed commonweal­th rules when procuring garrison and welfare services on Nauru. “Government did not have any role in the procuremen­t process or the awarding of the contracts.”

 ??  ?? Canstruct Internatio­nal, which runs Australia’s offshore processing regime in Nauru, has won another unconteste­d government contract extension, bringing total revenue to $1.5bn. Photograph: AP
Canstruct Internatio­nal, which runs Australia’s offshore processing regime in Nauru, has won another unconteste­d government contract extension, bringing total revenue to $1.5bn. Photograph: AP

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