Bangkok Post

PM rebuffs child refugee woes

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SYDNEY: Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott yesterday savaged a Human Rights Commission report into the struggles of asylum-seeker children held in detention as “blatantly partisan” and said he had no guilt “whatsoever”.

In a damning report to parliament, the government-funded commission said its 10-month investigat­ion of 11 detention centres found widespread sexual assault, self-harm and severe mental disorders among children.

“There appears to be no rational explanatio­n for the prolonged detention of children,” stated the report, titled “The Forgotten Children”.

“The mandatory and prolonged immigratio­n detention of children is in clear violation of internatio­nal human rights law.”

Australia has long faced internatio­nal criticism over its policies to imprison asylum-seekers arriving by boat in offshore camps Christmas Island, Nauru and Papua New Guinea’s Manus Island.

The numbers of locked up children peaked mid-2013 at 1,992 under the former Labor administra­tion, but has sharply fallen to several hundred since the Abbott-led government was elected in September 2013.

An angry Mr Abbott said his policies to stop the boats cut the numbers detained and questioned why the report was not launched when Labor was in power.

“Frankly this is a blatantly partisan politicise­d exercise and the Human Rights Commission ought to be ashamed of itself,” he told Fairfax Radio.

“Where was the human rights commission when hundreds of people were drowning at sea? Where was the human rights commission when there were almost 2,000 children in detention?”

Under the government’s tough stance, boats are turned away at sea and anyone who makes it to Australia is denied resettleme­nt and instead sent to camps in Nauru and PNG.

Only one boatload of asylum-seekers has reached the Australian mainland since December 2013. Before this, boats were arriving almost daily, with hundreds of people dying en route.

The study, which covered 1,233 interviews with children and their parents between January 2013 to March 2014, records 233 assaults involving a child and 33 incidents of reported sexual assault.

Some 128 children harmed themselves while 27 cases voluntaril­y starved themselves.

Human Rights Commission chief Gillian Triggs said both sides of politics were responsibl­e and described the report as unpreceden­ted first-hand evidence of the impact that prolonged immigratio­n detention has on a child’s mental and physical health.

The average time children are held is one year and two months and Ms Triggs said the findings on mental health disorders in particular were “deeply shocking”.

“Thirty-four percent of children detained in Australia and Christmas Island have a mental health disorder of such severity that they require psychiatri­c support,” she said.

“Fewer than two percent of children in the general community have mental health disorders of this severity. Children are selfharmin­g in detention at very high rates.”

Asked whether he felt any guilt over the findings in the 315-page report, Mr Abbott replied: “None whatsoever.”

“The most compassion­ate thing you can do is stop the boats. We have stopped the boats.”

 ??  ?? PM Abbott has ‘no guilt whatsoever’ over a ‘shocking’ report into asylum-seeker kids.
PM Abbott has ‘no guilt whatsoever’ over a ‘shocking’ report into asylum-seeker kids.

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