Australia to move detained asylum group onshore
BBC | 25 July 2014
A
group of 157 asylum seekers held at sea will be brought to the
Australian mainland to be detained, Australia's immigration minister
says.
The group have been held at sea by customs officials for almost a month.
Rights groups had voiced serious concerns about their treatment.
The case came to light earlier this month as Australia
detained a separate boat of Sri Lankan asylum seekers, screened their
asylum claims at sea and returned them to Sri Lanka.
Human rights activists filed a legal challenge aimed at preventing similar handling of this second group of people.
Rights groups say Tamils can still face intimidation and
violence in Sri Lanka, five years after the end of the civil war, which
pitted the majority Sinhalese Sri Lankan military against Tamil
separatists.
Under international treaties, Australia cannot return people
to places where they might face persecution. UN refugee body UNHCR has
also expressed concern about the fairness of on-water screening of
asylum claims.
'Will not settle'
Australian officials have not revealed where the group were being held.
Immigration Minister Scott Morrison said on Friday that -
following talks with Indian officials - they would be brought to
Australia.
Consular officials from the Indian High Commission would be
given access to determine identities and "arrange where possible the
return of any persons to India".
India would also consider taking non-nationals who were Indian residents, he said.
It was not clear what might happen to those who did not fall
into this category, nor was the extent to which asylum claims would be
assessed addressed.
But Mr Morrison said no members of the group would be allowed to settle in Australia.
He declined to comment on where the group would be detained
but local reports say they are being transferred to the Curtin detention
centre via the Cocos Islands.
'Prolong suffering'
The move is an apparent set-back for the government, which enforces tough policies aimed at ending the arrival of asylum boats.
Australia detains all those who arrive by boat. In recent
months detainees have been processed offshore, in camps in Papua New
Guinea and Nauru. Those found to be refugees will be settled in PNG and
Nauru, not Australia.
Reports have also emerged in recent months of Australia towing boats back to Indonesia, the most common embarkation point.
The government says the aim is to save lives by preventing
people getting on dangerous boats. But refugee advocates and the UN have
voiced increasing concern about the policies, with severe criticism of conditions in Australia's detention camps.
Responding to Mr Morrison's announcement, Amnesty
International said the development showed that "stranding a boatload of
people in the middle of the sea, in an effort to 'stop the boats', has
achieved nothing".
"All it has done is prolong and exacerbate the suffering of
more than 150 asylum seekers and their families," said Graeme McGregor,
the group's refugee campaign co-ordinator.
All asylum seekers must have the opportunity to undergo a "full, fair and rigorous" assessment for refugee status, he said.
No comments:
Post a Comment