The Borneo Post

Refugee found dead at Australia camp on PNG

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SYDNEY: An asylum- seeker being held on one of Australia’s remote Pacific island camps was found dead yesterday, rights groups said, in a suspected suicide that has once again thrown Canberra’s treatment of refugees into the spotlight.

Australia sends asylum- seekers who try to enter the country by boat to processing facilities on Nauru and on Papua New Guinea’s Manus Island, with those found to be refugees barred from resettling in Australia.

Conditions in the camps have been widely criticised by refugee advocates and medical profession­als, with reports of widespread abuse, self-harm and mental health problems.

Sydney-based Refugee Action Coalition said Monday that a 32-year- old Tamil man from Sri Lanka took his own life at a hospital Manus Island, where he was being treated for self-harm.

It is the second apparent suicide on the island in the last two months, with an Iranian man found dead in August.

“Once again, such tragedy highlights the acute vulnerabil­ity of refugees and asylum- seekers under Australia’s ‘offshore processing’ approach, and the need for proper care,” the United Nations High Commission­er for Refugees ( UNHCR) said in a statement yesterday.

A PNG court ruled last year that holding people on Manus was unconstitu­tional, and Canberra is set to shut the detention centre by the end of this month.

It has tried with little success to relocate the detainees to third countries like Cambodia, or settle them elsewhere in PNG.

Last week, a first wave of refugees departed from the Pacific camps for the US in a deal struck with Washington under former president Barack Obama.

The pact has angered President Donald Trump who has begrudging­ly agreed to accept an unspecifie­d number of people who can fulfil rigorously-vetted requiremen­ts.

But it remains unclear what will happen to those not taken by the United States. — AFP

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