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UN report condemns "inhuman" Australian detention
of refugees
By Jake Skeers
5 August 2002
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Australias indefinite detention of asylum seekers came
under fresh international criticism last week after a United Nations
report condemned the policy as degrading and inhuman.
Media commentators spoke of Australia replacing apartheid South
Africa as a target of global denunciation, with the report declaring
that the mandatory imprisonment of asylum seekers violates international
law.
The UN report, written by former Indian Supreme Court chief
justice Rajendra Bhagwati, found that men, women and children
who had been in detention for months, and sometimes one or two
years, were prisoners without having committed any offence.
Their only fault was that they had left their native home and
sought to find refuge or a better life on the Australian soil.
Bhagwati stated that the Australian government is detaining
children in breach of the Convention on the Rights of the Child,
which prohibits the imprisonment of children, except as a last
resort for the shortest possible time. He said the mandatory detention
system also violates the International Covenant on Civil and Political
Rights, which outlaws arbitrary detention and the denial of access
to legal review of incarceration.
After visiting Australias detention centres between May
24 and June 2 as a personal envoy of UN Human Rights Commissioner
Mary Robinson, Bhagwati reported that children are suffering mentally
and physically in the camps. These children were growing
up in an environment, which affected their physical and mental
growth and many of them were traumatised and led to harm themselves
in utter despair, he concluded. Wrist-slashing and suicide
threats are rife.
Robinson released the report in Geneva and endorsed its contents,
calling on Australia to meet its international human rights obligations,
particularly in relation to the detention of children. She recommended
a follow-up visit by another representative next year. Robinson
originally requested Bhagwatis visit in February following
a 16-day hunger strike by 350 asylum seekers in the semi-desert
Woomera camp. After initially threatening to block the visit,
the government delayed the inspection but permitted it to proceed,
so as not to openly call into question Australias international
image.
Australia remains the only country that compulsorily detains
all asylum seekers who arrive independently, without permission.
As of May 3, there were 1,495 detainees, including 181 women and
170 children. As well as unauthorised arrivals, they
included more than 500 people detained for over-staying visas
or breaching visa conditions.
Having interviewed current and former detainees, including
children, and spoken with human rights groups and lawyers, Bhagwati
concluded that basic legal rights are denied. In contravention
of international law, detainees are unable to seek judicial review
of detention because the Migration Act requires all unlawful
non-citizens to be detained, regardless of their circumstances.
Asylum seekers who are screened out after the initial
assessment stage because they do not meet the technical requirements
for refugee status might be seriously handicapped on account
of ignorance about their rights and could be the most in
need of legal advice. Other concerns included the use of punitive
isolation cells and the imprisonment of detainees in jails.
Furthermore, accessing legal aid in regard to complaints
about treatment and conditions in the detention centres presented
a genuine difficulty. Lawyers, psychologists and non-government
organisations are often prevented from entering the detention
centres to see their clients. Lawyers and officers from the governments
own Human Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission cannot enter
a camp without a specific request from a detainee. Other organisations
and individuals have to obtain permission from Immigration Minister
Philip Ruddock.
Bhagwati found that Australia also breaches the International
Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, which recognises
a childs right to education. While children are in
fact given access to education to some extent, it would appear
that, at least in Woomera detention centre, the education services
are at best wholly inadequate. Interviewed on the Australian
Broadcasting Corporations Lateline program, Bhagwati
said the education facilities at Woomera consist of a single room
with a few playthings. Some sort of alphabet
was taught, which could barely be described as schooling.
In his report, Bhagwati condemned the detention system for
its detrimental effect on families. He criticised the governments
refusal to consider family reunion when assessing refugee claims.
Since the introduction of temporary protection visas in 1999,
successful applicants have been denied the right to bring their
families to Australia, despite being accepted as genuine refugees.
In a number of cases that have come to light, one member of the
family is living on a temporary refugee visa in Australia, but
the rest of the family remains incarcerated.
Bhagwati pointed out that even in the case of the Woomera housing
project, husbands are denied the right to live with their families.
The government set up the pilot scheme allowing some women and
children to live outside the camp as a means of heading off mounting
concern about the impact of its policy.
Government vilifies report
As soon as the report was released, the Howard government thumbed
its nose at the UN. In an orchestrated response, leading ministers
sought to undermine Bhagwatis credibility, sending relations
between the UN and Australia to a new low. Foreign Affairs Minister
Alexander Downer, Attorney-General Daryl Williams and Immigration
Minister Ruddock issued a joint statement attacking his report
as emotive, fundamentally flawed and lacking
objectivity.
They accused Bhagwati of interfering in domestic politics,
and insisted that mandatory detention would remain. It [the
report] misconceives the governments policy and ignores
the fact that people in immigration detention have arrived in
the country illegally, they stated.
Having been given a draft copy of the report for their comment,
they produced a 12-page rebuttal, listing 30 criticisms and dismissing
the report outright. Contemptuous of basic democratic rights,
they accused refugees of lengthening their own detention by appealing
to tribunals and courts against visa denials. They even blamed
parents for bringing their children with them when they fled persecution.
In separate media comments, Ruddock and Downer went further.
Downer declared that Bhagwati had been duped by immigration activists,
while Ruddock accused Bhagwati of coming to Australia with
preconceived views.... he spent all his time here talking to lawyers
and advocates.
Ruddocks comment is particularly revealing. The specific
purpose of Bhagwatis visit was to investigate whether the
detention facilities and system were in accord with international
law. It seems that his only preconceived view was
that the Australian government should abide by the refugee, civil
rights and childrens rights covenants that it is a party
to.
The governments hostile response continued its practice
of demonising refugees and seizing upon their desperate efforts
to escape oppression, in order to divert attention away from the
domestic social crisis produced by its own policies. The joint
statement reiterated the border protection stance
that the government has adopted since turning away the Tampa
refugees last September. The policies reflect Australias
sovereign right under international law to determine who will
enter our borders and be permitted to remain, and the conditions
under which they may be removed.
At the same time, three ministers claimed that Australia remained
committed to core international human rights instruments.
Their sensitivity on this issue arises because Australia has a
record of invoking human rights concerns as a cover
for intervening to protect its interests in the Asia-Pacific region
and elsewhere. Just three years ago, in 1999, the Howard government
dispatched some 5,000 troops to East Timor to defend Australian
interests, particularly in the Timor Gap oil and gas fields, on
the pretext of defending the human rights of the Timorese people.
Two years ago, the government threatened to quit the UN system
of oversight committees on civil rights after UN authorities cited
mandatory sentencing provisions in Western Australia and the Northern
Territory for breaching international covenants. At that point,
the government backed down, anxious to avoid further diplomatic
damage.
The Labor Party highlighted this concern in criticising the
governments latest confrontational response. Labor first
introduced mandatory detention in the early 1990s, instigating
the demonising of asylum seekers, and remains firmly committed
to the policy. However, it urged the government to explore options
such as the release of children and community detention in order
to deflect the UN criticism.
Labors foreign affairs spokesman Kevin Rudd warned that
Australia could not pick and choose when it wanted to be part
of the UN system. Australia for the past 50 years has made
huge use of the UN system in pursuit of Australias national
and international interests. Most recently, weve used extensively
the UN as far as our interests in East Timor are concerned.
As Labors record on refugee detention demonstrates, these
differences have nothing to do with defending the basic democratic
rights of asylum seekers; they are entirely bound up with pursuing
the interests of Australian big business. Nevertheless, the Howard
government is intent on pursuing an increasingly unilateralist
approach, taking its anti-UN rhetoric and defiance of international
law to new levels.
See Also:
Afghan boys denied asylum
by Britain after escaping from Australian camp
[30 July 2002]
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