The Scotsman

Australian government reaches £53m settlement with suing asylum seekers

- By ROD MCGUIRK in Canberra

The Australian government has reached a settlement of around £53 million with more than 1,900 asylum seekers who sued over their treatment at an immigratio­n camp in Papua New Guinea.

Australia refuses to resettle asylum seekers who arrive by boat and pays the impoverish­ed Pacific island nations of Papua New Guinea and Nauru to keep hundreds of them from the Middle East, Africa and Asia.

A trial by 1,905 asylum seekers currently or formerly kept at camp at Manus Island in Papua New Guinea was to begin yesterday in the Victoria state Supreme Court and was scheduled to take six months. The asylum seekers were seeking damages for alleged physical and psychologi­cal injuries they say they suffered as a result of the conditions on Manus Island, as well as for false imprisonme­nt following a Papua New Guinea court ruling that their detention was unconstitu­tional.

The camps on Manus and Nauru were once detention centres, but asylum seekers are now allowed outside the fences.

Their lawyer David Curtain told the court they reached a settlement with the Australian government and the operators of the male-only Manus Island camp, G4S Australia and Broadspect­rum.

The government and operators deny liability as part of the settlement and agreed to pay £42m plus the cost of three years of legal work behind the case, asylum seeker lawyer Rory Walsh said.

Walsh said he did not know how much the government would pay.

Immigratio­n minister Peter Dutton said he expected the asylum seekers’ costs would add another £11m to the government’s bill.

“An anticipate­d six-month legal battle for this case would have cost tens of millions of dollars in legal fees alone with an unknown outcome,” Dutton

0 Abdul Aziz Muhamat is among asylum seekers suing Australian government over camp conditions said in a statement. “In such circumstan­ces, a settlement was considered a prudent outcome for Australian taxpayers.”

Sudanese asylum seeker Abdul Aziz Muhamat said he is “really happy” with the outcome.

“One thing that today I found out is, there are some people really down there in Australia, they care about us,” he said.

A lawyer acting for the asylum seekers, Andrew Baker, said the money would be distribute­d according to how long asylum seekers had spent on Manus and what they had endured.

“This settlement is an important step toward recognizin­g the extremely hostile conditions the detainees endured at Manus Island,” Mr Baker said.

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