WATCH VIDEO |
Morrison: asylum seekers should go home or face 'very, very long' detention
Exclusive: extraordinary footage emerges showing Australian immigration minister calling on detained asylum seekers to leave
The Guardian | 25 June 2014
Extraordinary film footage has emerged of Australian immigration
minister Scott Morrison directly threatening asylum seekers detained in
Australia’s offshore detention centres in Papua New Guinea and Nauru to
return to the countries they have fled from or spend a “very, very long
time” in detention.
The footage, obtained by Guardian
Australia, shows the immigration minister staring down the lens of a
camera and telling asylum seekers in a pre-recorded message: “There are
new rules in place under this government so I urge you to think
carefully about your next decision and to make a decision to get on with
the rest of your life and to not remain here and take the option to go
back to the country from which you’ve originally come.”
It
is further evidence of the concerted attempts by Australia’s right-wing
Coalition government to coerce asylum seekers to return and follows
news published by Fairfax newspapers that some are being offered an increased repatriation incentive of $10,000.
Australia
is a signatory to the Refugee Convention, of which non-refoulement –
the rule of not returning asylum seekers to persecution – is a core
principle.
Before urging asylum seekers to return, Morrison warns: “If you choose not to go home then you will spend a very, very long time here and so I urge you to think carefully about that decision and make a decision to get on with the rest of your life.”
Guardian
Australia understands the video message was recorded in early
September, soon after the Coalition government gained power, but was
never shown to asylum seekers.
At this point asylum
seekers from Syria, Afghanistan, Iraq, Somalia and other war-torn
countries were detained on Manus and Nauru.
Uncertainty
over processing times has been identified as a key factor leading up to
the unrest in the Manus centre which left one Iranian asylum seeker,
Reza Barati, dead and dozens injured. Morrison has used numerous media
appearances to argue that processing of asylum claims is being done in a
timely manner.
Guardian Australia has previously
revealed how Syrian asylum seekers on Manus were offered repatriation
despite articulating fears of certain death if returned, which Human Rights Watch say is in contravention of international law.
The
video message is understood to have been recorded before Morrison
visited Manus in late September, where he directly addressed some
detained asylum seekers, telling them they would never be resettled in
Australia under the government’s hardline “PNG solution”, which sees all
asylum seekers who arrive by boat processed and resettled offshore.
Whistleblower and former Manus guard Martin Appleby told Guardian Australia
that Morrison’s September address on Manus “put people’s security at
risk, including his own” and sent tension in the camp soaring
afterwards.
The minister delivered a similar address to asylum seekers detained on Nauru. Footage obtained by the Asylum Seeker Resource Centre
showed Morrison telling asylum seekers: “You will not be getting what
you got on that boat for, and anyone else who tries to come will not get
what they got on that boat for.”
At the start of the
video address Morrison tells asylum seekers they have entered Australia
illegally and that the new Australian government “will not be putting up
with those sorts of arrivals”.
Ben Pynt, the director
of human rights advocacy at Humanitarian research partners, said the
video showed the immigration minister’s “callous disregard for the
mental health of asylum seekers detained offshore”.
Pynt said it highlighted the government’s attempt to actively coerce people into returning to their country of origin.
“This
isn't just a violation of the technicalities of international law, this
violates the fundamental object and purpose of the Refugee Convention
and other human rights treaties that Australia's governments have
undertaken to protect.
“The message is 'we don't want you and nobody else does either, so you might as well go home,'” Pynt said.
A
spokeswoman for Scott Morrison did not respond to detailed questions
but appeared to suggest that the threat to return was not a blanket one
to all asylum seekers detained offshore.
“It is true
that people assessed as being found not to be owed protection who
refused to go home would have to remain at offshore processing centres
for a long period of time,” the spokeswoman said.
“Those whose asylum claims have failed should explore their options to return.”
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