The Phnom Penh Post

Australia rejects UN call to release Tamil family

-

AUSTRALIA has rejected a UN call to release a Tamil asylumseek­ing family from offshore detention after the UN weighed in on a case that has galvanised huge public support.

The family of four has been held at the Christmas Island detention facilit y for t he past month while t heir fight to stay in t he countr y is before t he courts.

Kokilapath­mapriya Nadesaling­am and Nadesaling­am Murugappan, from Sri Lanka, arrived in Australia by boat separately in 2012 and 2013 seeking asylum and have not been accepted as refugees.

Their two children, Kopika and Tharunicaa, were both born in Australia and the family’s legal battle hinges on the youngest daughter as her lawyer argues her claim has never been assessed.

Lawyer Carina Ford submitted to the UN’s Human Rights Committee last month on the toddler’s behalf.

In an October 1 letter, the committee says in response that it “has requested the State party to transfer [the family] within 30 days into a community setting arrangemen­t or to find another way to end their existing situation of detention”.

A Department of Home Affairs spokespers­on said in a statement that the department was “aware” of the UN’s request, but the family would remain on Christmas Island while their case was under judicial review.

Family friend Angela Fredericks described the UN’s position as “confirmati­on” that detention facilities were “no place for children or families”.

“We’ve seen that over the last 19 months with the emotional and physical damage that has occurred to these girls,” she said.

Austra lia’s hardline immigratio­n policies include turning away ref ugees arriv ing by boat and offshore detention, both measures condemned by the UN.

The Tamil family settled in a small rural Queensland town of Biloela, where their neighbours have banded together to push for them to be allowed to remain, a campaign that has received support even from some right-wing commentato­rs and politician­s.

A Federal Court judge ruled last month there was enough evidence for the toddler’s case to go to trial, though a date has not yet been set.

Both children were born in Australia but do not have citizenshi­p. They have never been to Sri Lanka.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Cambodia