Oman Daily Observer

Asylum-seekers win $53m detention settlement from Australian govt

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SYDNEY: Nearly 2,000 asylum-seekers held in a remote detention centre in Papua New Guinea for more than two years will receive A$70 million ($53 million) in compensati­on after the Australian government agreed to settle their court case on Wednesday.

Some 1,905 men who were detained at the facility between November 2012 and December 2014 filed legal claims last year against the Australian government and two contractor­s who ran the camp on PNG’s Manus Island.

The camp is one of two Australian facilities for processing asylumseek­ers that have attracted widespread criticism from the United Nations and rights groups because of their harsh conditions and allegation­s of systemic abuse.

Lawyers from the Slater & Gordon firm representi­ng the men said the Australian government and security companies G4S and Broadspect­rum, now owned by Ferrovial, would collective­ly pay the compensati­on.

They said the compensati­on would be distribute­d among the former and current detainees according to the length of their detention and the severity of the injuries and illnesses they alleged they had suffered. The government would also pay court costs, the lawyers told a news conference in Melbourne.

The Australian government confirmed the settlement, which it said it entered into to save taxpayers the expense of a costly trial. Immigratio­n Minister Peter Dutton described settling the case as a “prudent” decision.

The settlement removes a major impediment to Australia ending its controvers­ial offshore detention scheme, under which would-be asylum-seekers who arrive by boat are held indefinite­ly in the two Pacific detention centres. The other is on the tiny and remote island of Nauru.

Australia agreed on a refugee resettleme­nt deal with the United States late last year, under which the bulk of those detained at the two camps would be relocated and Australia in turn would settle refugees from Central America.

US President Donald Trump has begrudging­ly agreed to honour that deal despite earlier calling it “dumb”.

Australia has said that, once the US resettleme­nt occurs, it will no longer be responsibl­e for the asylum-seekers on Manus Island or Nauru.

Many of the claimants awarded the settlement remain on Manus Island, while others have returned home.

Majid Kamasaee, the original plaintiff in the case, was one of those who agreed to return to his native Iran.

 ?? — Reuters ?? A shelter and container used as accommodat­ion can be seen inside the Manus Island detention centre in Papua New Guinea.
— Reuters A shelter and container used as accommodat­ion can be seen inside the Manus Island detention centre in Papua New Guinea.

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