The Borneo Post

Demands growing for inquiry into Australia refugee abuse

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SYDNEY: Australia yesterday faced growing opposition demands for an inquiry into its treatment of asylum-seekers on remote Pacific islands after further allegation­s emerged of abuse against refugees.

Photograph­s published in Australian media on the weekend showed two bloodied Afghan men after they were allegedly attacked with an iron bar by locals on Papua New Guinea’s Manus Island.

The graphic images follow the leaking last week of some 2,000 incident reports filled in by workers on the second island to which Australia sends asylumseek­ers arriving by boat, Nauru, detailing abuse suffered by asylum-seekers.

“We’re seeing more and more disturbing reports coming out from Nauru,” opposition Labor leader Bill Shorten said Monday.

“Just because people are in detention doesn’t mean that they have to be mistreated and it doesn’t mean that they should be kept in indefinite detention,” he told reporters in Brisbane.

“That’s why Labor is leading the push to have a Senate inquiry.”

Shorten said he still supported the offshore processing of asylumseek­ers on Nauru and in PNG to dissuade others from making the dangerous journey to Australia, but that refugees should not be left to languish in Pacific camps indefinite­ly.

The leaked documents, which allege that asylum- seekers on Nauru, including children, suffer violence, sexual assault and degrading treatment, have prompted the United Nations to repeat calls for offshore processing to end.

“The allegation­s contained in the documents must be systematic­ally and properly investigat­ed and those responsibl­e held accountabl­e,” said Ravina Shamdasani, spokespers­on for the Office of the UN High Commission­er for Human Rights in Geneva.

New Zealand’s Labour opposition has also weighed into the debate, with David Shearer describing the policy as unsustaina­ble.

“It’s almost like Australia has lost its moral compass in terms of where it’s going,” he said.

The Nauru reports published by The Guardian allege incidents such as guards threatenin­g a boy with death and only allowing a young woman a longer shower in return for sexual favours.

Mental stress caused by prolonged detention was deemed to be the cause of alleged cases of self-harm, including a woman trying to hang herself and a girl sewing her lips together.

Some 442 people remain on tiny Nauru today and almost double that number on Manus. — AFP

 ??  ?? An injured Afghan refugee (from the Manus Island detention centre being carried into the back of a vehicle after he was allegedly attacked by a group of Papua New Guinean men while out on a day release. — AFP photo
An injured Afghan refugee (from the Manus Island detention centre being carried into the back of a vehicle after he was allegedly attacked by a group of Papua New Guinean men while out on a day release. — AFP photo

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