The Guardian Australia

Leaked photos of Papua New Guinea prison reveal 'torture' of 18 asylum seekers cut off from world

- Helen Davidson

Leaked pictures from inside Papua New Guinea’s Bomana immigratio­n detention centre have given a glimpse of where up to 20 asylum seekers still remain locked up by PNG authoritie­s, despite widespread concerns for their health, welfare and legal rights.

Despite around 30 men being released after signing agreements to return to their country of origin, Guardian Australia understand­s all remain in PNG.

In August PNG authoritie­s arrested 52 men who had previously been detained on Manus Island on behalf of the Australian government after seeking asylum by boat.

Of the 52, there are believed to be just 18 left inside the prison. The others have all been removed, having signed agreements to be voluntaril­y returned to their country of origin. They are being accommodat­ed in Port Moresby ahead of deportatio­n, but none have left, and few are willing to speak about the Bomana prison for fear of being returned.

Having fled and sought asylum, then spent up to seven years in Australia’s offshore detention system, multiple former detainees have said it was Bomana which broke them.

In the months since they were detained, numerous detainees selfharmed or attempted to take their own lives. Some have been hospitalis­ed. One Iranian asylum seeker described the conditions in Bomana as “designed to torture people”.

The first public pictures from inside the centre, taken late last year and obtained by Guardian Australia, reveal the living arrangemen­ts for those who were held and those who remain.

According to the photograph­s and interviews with people familiar with the facility, Bomana’s immigratio­n detention centre is divided into five compounds – Karanas and Diwai on one side of the centre, and Raun Wara,

Kunai and Balus on the other.

There is no shade and the compounds which each hold a few dozen demountabl­e rooms are separated by fences.

In the rooms – which are only air conditione­d in one compound – men sleep on a hard plastic mattresses with no pillow.

Food is minimal and they must drink water from a tap – which is not considered safe to drink in Port Moresby. According to former detainees there are frequent announceme­nts over the loudspeake­r and unannounce­d room searches by guards, including by some Australian employees.

The Australian government has maintained it has no involvemen­t or visibility inside Bomana, and there are suggestion­s that the PNG government’s approach has caused concern with Australian authoritie­s.

Detainees determined to have behavioura­l issues are held in solitary conditions in Karanas, a managed accommodat­ion area. It has been alleged to Guardian Australia that men are sometimes sent to Karanas as punishment.

The Diwai compound is a supported accommodat­ion area designated for people with mental health issues requiring further support, but Guardian Australia was told it was also used as temporary detention for other people being deported.

The other three compounds, Raun Wara, Kunai, and Balus, are on the other side of the facility, but still separated from each other by fence.

The men who were taken to Bomana had either had their asylum claims rejected or were never assessed, and they were deemed non-refugees. Ahead of their detention in the Australia-funded facility, the men were ordered to surrender their mobile phone, any medication, and to pack up their personal property.

They were then taken to Bomana and denied access to phones, lawyers and, allegedly, adequate medical care.

Critical cases were taken to hospital, but no further informatio­n was available.

It was later revealed that at least a dozen were very ill and had been at various stages of approval for medevac to Australia, including nine who had been approved. That process stopped upon their detention.

In recent months groups of detainees have been released and housed in Port Moresby, after signing agreements to be deported back to their home countries.

Guardian Australia approached the PNG immigratio­n department and minister with questions but received no response.

Graham Thom, a spokesman for Amnesty Internatio­nal Australia, said it was “frightenin­g” that men continued

to be detained in Bomana.

“Given the small number left, we see no reason why they’d keep this centre open and those individual­s detained,” Thom said. “The men [who have been released] are clearly not going anywhere anyway.”

Thom welcomed that the majority of the men had been released but he said Amnesty had major concerns it was only because they had agreed to return home, “when clearly what we’re being told is they still have grave fears for their safety”.

“If the only way you get out is putting your life potentiall­y at risk, then this is a serous breach of PNG human rights obligation­s.”

 ??  ?? The Canberra government-funded Bomana immigratio­n detention centre in Port Moresby, where Papua New Guinean authoritie­s are still holding about 18 of the 53 asylum seekers arrested in August 2019
The Canberra government-funded Bomana immigratio­n detention centre in Port Moresby, where Papua New Guinean authoritie­s are still holding about 18 of the 53 asylum seekers arrested in August 2019
 ??  ?? There is no shade inside the Bomana immigratio­n detention centre, and only one compound is air conditione­d.
There is no shade inside the Bomana immigratio­n detention centre, and only one compound is air conditione­d.

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