The Borneo Post

Australia vows to ‘restore order’ on imigration detention island

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SYDNEY: Unrest broke out at an Australian island immigratio­n detention centre, authoritie­s and NGOs said yesterday following reports the Christmas Island facility had been set alight by frustrated detainees.

The Australian Border Force said an operation was underway “to restore order after a disturbanc­e” at the North West Point Immigratio­n Detention Centre on the Australian territory in the Indian Ocean.

“A small number of detainees caused some damage to the facility overnight and continue to be non-compliant,” the government agency said in a statement, adding there were no reports of any injuries.

Advocacy group Refugee Action Coalition said reports from inside the centre suggested two compounds had been set ablaze overnight Tuesday into Wednesday (yesterday) as tensions boiled over.

“While the extent of the damage is not known, the glare from the fires and the extent of the smoke in the air indicates the fires are substantia­l,” the group said.

Video footage apparently shot inside the facility and posted to Facebook shows a man climbing on a roof as a blaze glows orangered behind him. “This is how frustrated people are with this ... detention. We are sick and tired to be treated as a dog,” a man can be heard saying.

“They are burning the roof... nobody care about us,” he adds later.

National Justice Project principal solicitor George Newhouse said detainees were increasing­ly frustrated with conditions after being confined to their rooms for up to 22 hours a day and unable to contact their families due to a poor mobile phone signal.

“The federal government have a policy of keeping detainees in harsh and inhumane conditions to force them to leave Australia,” Newhouse said. “These harsh and solitary conditions are having an effect on the mental health and welfare of detainees.”

The Australian Border Force said the centre was being used to house ‘unlawful non-citizens’ — migrants who had their visas cancelled after being convicted of crimes — but would not confirm how many people were currently being detained.

The Refugee Council of Australia said the facility held 220 detainees as at October 2020.

The island gained notoriety as a venue where asylum seekers who attempted to reach the country by boat were detained.

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