The Guardian Australia

‘Never given a chance’: freed asylum seekers lament lost decade in immigratio­n detention

- Paul Karp

At least eight Bangladesh­i asylum seekers have been released from immigratio­n detention in Australia after languishin­g there for a decade, in a move that signals the Albanese government is winding back arbitrary detention, according to a lawyer for some of the men.

But while their release has given them hope, the men have spoken out about the terrible toll of the lengthy period of indefinite detention.

“Who is going to give me back 10 years of my life?” one man said through an interprete­r.

“That was the most valuable time of my life, in my 20s, it’s 10 years I will never get back.”

The Bangladesh­i asylum seekers were released on 10 November on temporary six-month visas with work rights, after being held in detention centres including Yongah Hilland the Melbourne Immigratio­n Transit Accommodat­ion.

Sign up for Guardian Australia’s free morning and afternoon email newsletter­s for your daily news roundup

Refugee lawyer Alison Battisson, the director principal of Human Rights for All, which represents six of the asylum seekers, said their release is evidence the government is winding back arbitrary detention, using “Godlike” ministeria­l powers to clear what the home affairs department calls an “intractabl­e” caseload of people in detention.

One of Battisson’s clients, who Guardian Australia has chosen not to identify due to uncertaint­y about his future after the expiry of his sixmonth visa, said he had experience­d “long years of hopelessne­ss, depression and frustratio­n” in “horrible” detention conditions.

The man, who was raised Muslim by his foster parents, fled Bangladesh after being convicted of apostasy and beaten due to his relationsh­ip with a Hindu woman. He arrived in Australia in November 2012 by boat.

Speaking through Human Rights for All’s special counsel, Zaki Omar, who acted as an interprete­r , the man said it was “hard to establish” the danger of returning, and the department “didn’t believe” his claims “because coming from Bangladesh – our cases are not black and white, it is not a regular conflict zone”.

The man said that he “never had an option” to return. “I knew I would be killed,” he said. “That risk to my life was always there, with nobody to support me back there … I would get killed by fanatics.”

Of indefinite detention, the man said it is “not like other prisoners who know a date they will be released, even after a few years”.

“Not knowing when, if at all, it would ever happen, makes you so restless or so hopeless, we were given anxiety and sleeping pills to numb ourselves.”

Battisson’s client said he is “hopeful” he can “rebuild [his] life” but now faces an “uncertain situation” with a temporary visa and no way to sustain himself.

“I have no idea why we were kept inside [detention] for so long,” he said. “It’s not that I have any criminal record, not that I was ever released and did something wrong and was put back in … I was never given a chance to begin with.”

After the election of the Albanese government, Guardian Australia revealed in September the new immigratio­n minister, Andrew Giles, and the department were pursuing “alternativ­es to held detention”, resulting in refugee advocates reporting “encouragin­g” signs more people assessed as a low risk to the community are being released.

Battisson said the release of her clients is “part of a move that the new government is recognisin­g the true purpose of detention”, shifting “away from detention as a first resort”, and releasing people who “pose absolutely no risk to the Australian community”.

“People like these Bangladesh­is who, none of them have a criminal record … [who have] a perfect behavioura­l record in detention … They are the sort of people who should not be in detention,” she said.

According to the incoming ministeria­l brief in April there were 1,414 people detained in the immigratio­n network of 12 detention centres, 61% of who are there due to visa cancellati­ons and 14% of who are “unauthoris­ed maritime arrivals”.

Battisson said that the population of detention has “changed dramat

ically” over the years, with fewer refugees and asylum seekers, and more people who have had their visas cancelled.

“Detention is an increasing­ly violent place and the Bangladesh­is … were targeted for violence,” she said.

“One of the gentlemen released on Thursday was in the gym one day and someone just came up and … king-hit him from behind.”

Although the department found they were not owed protection, Battisson maintains her clients have legitimate refugee claims, with wellfounde­d fears of return because they were targeted in Bangladesh due to family circumstan­ces or because they were supporters of opposition political groups.

“It’s another example of the complete shambles that the department of immigratio­n and home affairs was left in by the Liberal government,” she said.

“The delays, the lack of transparen­cy … has cost these men at least eight years of their lives, if you say, maybe two years was fine in sorting out who they are, but it’s cost enormous amounts of money and time.”

In September Giles said that the government “is committed to ensuring humane and risk-based immigratio­n detention policies”.

“If there are no security or safety concerns, individual­s should be living in the community until a durable solution is finalised,” he said.

“Since becoming minister I have met the commonweal­th ombudsman, the UNHCR, the Australian Human Rights Commission and the Red Cross to discuss their crucial role in providing independen­t oversight of the immigratio­n detention network.”

The home affairs department said that arbitrary immigratio­n detention is not acceptable and Australia “takes its human rights obligation­s seriously”.

“Immigratio­n detention of an individual on the basis that they are an unlawful non-citizen is not arbitrary under internatio­nal law if it is reasonable, necessary and proportion­ate in light of the circumstan­ces and reassessed as it extends in time,” the department said.

“Management of detainees … is carried out with primary considerat­ion given to the safety and security of all individual­s, staff, and the public.

“All incidents in immigratio­n detention are appropriat­ely reviewed and referred to the relevant police jurisdicti­on where there is any allegation of criminalit­y.”

 ?? Photograph: Rebecca Lemay/AAP ?? Several Bangladesh­i asylum seekers have been released from Yongah Hill, in Western Australia, on temporary six-month visas.
Photograph: Rebecca Lemay/AAP Several Bangladesh­i asylum seekers have been released from Yongah Hill, in Western Australia, on temporary six-month visas.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia