Iran Daily

Australia’s offshore detention is ‘cruel, inhuman’: ICC prosecutor

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Australia’s offshore detention regime is a “cruel, inhuman, or degrading treatment” and unlawful under internatio­nal law, the Internatio­nal Criminal Court’s prosecutor said. But the office of the prosecutor has stopped short of deciding to prosecute the Australian government, saying that while the imprisonme­nt of refugees and asylum seekers formed the basis of a crime against humanity, the violations did not rise to the level to warrant further investigat­ion, the Guardian reported.

In a letter to the independen­t MP for Clark, Andrew Wilkie, the office of the ICC prosecutor said conditions in the Australian-run camps on Nauru and Papua New Guinea’s Manus Island were dangerous and harsh, and an “environmen­t rife with sporadic acts of physical and sexual violence committed by staff at the facilities.”

“These conditions of detention appear to have constitute­d cruel, inhuman, or degrading treatment (“CIDT”), and the gravity of the alleged conduct thus appears to have been such that it was in violation of fundamenta­l rules of internatio­nal law.

“In terms of the conditions of detention and treatment, although the situation varied over time, the office considers that some of the conduct at the processing centers on Nauru and on Manus Island appears to constitute the underlying act of imprisonme­nt or other severe deprivatio­ns of physical liberty under article 7(1)(e) of the statute [crimes against humanity].”

But the office of the prosecutor said the matters did not fall within the jurisdicti­on of the court and did not demonstrat­e the “contextual elements” to warrant further investigat­ion for prosecutio­n.

“Cases must be grave enough to justify action by the court … it does not appear that the conditions of detention or treatment were of a severity to be appropriat­ely qualified as the crime against humanity of torture.”

The Internatio­nal Criminal Court was establishe­d in 2002 to try individual­s charged with “the gravest crimes of concern to the internatio­nal community, such as genocide, war crimes, and crimes against humanity.”

The Rome Statute that created the court has been ratified by 123 countries, including Australia, but several major countries – including China, India, Russia, and the US – have refused to join.

African countries have argued the court has been disproport­ionately and unfairly focused on crimes committed in Africa. The court has also been criticized for securing too few conviction­s.

Wilkie first wrote to the ICC in 2014, alleging the government of then prime minister Tony Abbott was breaching internatio­nal law by engaging in imprisonme­nt, deportatio­n and the forcible transfer of a population.

Abbott’s immigratio­n minister – now the Prime Minister – Scott Morrison derided Wilkie’s request as an “attentions­eeking” stunt, saying, “Australia is a sovereign country that implements our policies consistent with our domestic laws and our internatio­nal obligation­s.”

But Wilkie has remained in regular correspond­ence with the court since 2014, providing it with evidence of abuses including: Deaths in detention through murder and medical neglect; the indefinite detention of children; forced family separation; and the details of the Nauru Files, published by the Guardian detailing the detention system’s own reports of rape, sexual abuse, self-harm, and child abuse in offshore detention.

About 230 refugees and asylum seekers remain on Nauru, and about 180 in Papua New Guinea. Several dozen are undertakin­g the process for resettleme­nt in America.

“The ICC’S response is a remarkable condemnati­on of the cruelty of the Australian government’s asylum seeker policies,” Wilkie said.

“We’ve long known that the government’s response to asylum seekers has been barbaric, inhumane and expensive, but now there can be no doubt.”

“Although the ICC advised me that a number of matters I referred were beyond the court’s jurisdicti­on, recent developmen­ts in the government’s asylum seeker policies have opened up new avenues for further investigat­ion and I am currently seeking legal advice as to the next step forward.”

Greens Senator Nick Mckim said the prosecutor had found “people were illegally imprisoned on Manus Island and Nauru, denied proper medical care and treated in a cruel, inhuman and degrading way.”

“The New Zealand offer still stands and Mr. Morrison should pick up the phone to Ms. Ardern, and finally provide the freedom and safety so desperatel­y needed by so many people,” Mckim said.

Human rights lawyer Greg Barns, who worked with Wilkie in presenting evidence to the court, said the ICC had made it clear Australia’s offshore detention regime was a breach of the Rome statute.

“It is extraordin­ary and shameful that a nation which purports to believe in the rule of law should be found to be in breach of the internatio­nal law which outlaws cruelty and inhumanity.”

The Guardian put a series of questions regarding the ICC’S findings to the Department of Home Affairs. A response has not yet been received.

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