Bangkok Post

Man dies in immigratio­n detention

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TOKYO: A Vietnamese man held in a Japanese immigratio­n detention centre died on Saturday, six people said, drawing fresh attention to conditions in the country’s detention system.

The man died at the East Japan Immigratio­n Centre in Ibaraki prefecture, northeast of Tokyo, according to activists, a lawyer and a detainee held at the facility. Two men died at the same facility in 2014.

The deceased man was named Van Huan Nguyen and was one of more than 11,000 refugees that the country took in over the three decades to 2005 in the aftermath of the Vietnam War, according to two of the sources.

It was not clear for how long he had been detained or why. Nguyen did not have relatives in Japan but had many friends, said one of the sources who had known him.

“He was a bright, fun person,” she said. “I can’t believe he died.”

The Sankei daily reported that the East Japan Immigratio­n Centre said a guard had found a Vietnamese man in his forties lying unconsciou­s in his cell alone early on Saturday.

The guard called an ambulance and the detainee was sent to hospital, where his death was confirmed about an hour and a half later, the Sankei said, citing the centre. The authoritie­s would conduct an autopsy and investigat­e the cause of death, the Sankei said.

The East Japan Immigratio­n Centre and the justice ministry, which oversees immigratio­n facilities, could not be reached for comment yesterday.

Reuters was not able to independen­tly verify the death or the identity of the deceased.

A Reuters investigat­ion last year into the death of a Sri Lankan at a different facility in Tokyo revealed serious deficienci­es in medical care and monitoring in the immigratio­n detention system.

Since 2006, at least dozen people have died while in immigratio­n detention, including four cases of suicide.

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