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WSWS : News
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Australian government refuses to transfer refugees from malaria-ridden
camp
By Jake Skeers
27 February 2002
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The Australian government is continuing to incarcerate, in
life-threatening conditions, the asylum seekers it vilified during
last years election, when it falsely accused them of throwing
their children overboard in a bid to enter the country. Immigration
Minister Philip Ruddock has contemptuously rejected a call by
the Royal Australasian College of Physicians to immediately transfer
the 350 Iraqi refugees from an Australian-financed detention camp
on Manus Island, a remote Papua New Guinea outpost, where their
lives are at risk from a drug-resistant strain of malaria.
During the election campaign, Ruddock and Prime Minister John
Howard demonised the refugees who were floundering on a sinking
fishing boat off Australian waters, claiming they had thrown their
children into the sea when intercepted by a navy warship, the
HMAS Adelaide. The two politicians professed revulsion,
with Howard declaring that people who endangered childrens
lives should not be allowed into the country. After being rescued
by the Adelaides crew, the asylum-seekers were transported
to an old military base on Manus Island, under an agreement with
the PNG government, which was given strict instructions not to
allow them any access to the media.
During the past two weeks, the children overboard
allegations have been exposed as lies. It has now been revealed
that Howard and his ministers concocted the story, in collaboration
with top military, public service and intelligence officials,
to deceive the public and whip up anti-refugee hysteria during
the election campaign. The subsequent treatment of the refugees
at the hands of the government reveals the real extent of its
concern for the childrens lives and wellbeing.
Last week, the College of Physicians, backed by 10 experts
in the area of public health and infectious diseases, recommended
that the government urgently remove the refugees because falciparum
malaria, which is resistant to the drug chloroquine, is endemic
on Manus Island.
College president, Professor Richard Larkins, commented: Given
the medical evidence about the prevalence of malaria, in particular
the chloroquine-resistant strains, on Manus Island, the responsible
course of action is to immediately evacuate the detention centre.
This is the only truly effective way people at risk can be protected,
especially pregnant women and children, but also any others with
low immunity.
Statistics from Manus Island indicate that a high proportion
of the local population is infected with the disease. Malaria
is a dangerous disease which can rapidly lead to severe illness
and death, particularly in pregnant women and young children,
Dr Jill Sewell, president of the Colleges Paediatrics and
Child Health Division, pointed out.
Australias national antibiotic guidelines recommend
that pregnant women should not travel to areas with chloroquine-resistant
falciparum malaria, and Australias policy of placing
asylum seekers on Manus Island is putting them at high risk,
she stated. In addition, preventative drugs such as doxycycline
and mefloquine are unsuitable for prevention for pregnant women
and young children. The detainees should be moved to a location
where malaria and other potentially dangerous diseases are not
endemic, in order to protect the health of asylum seekers and
staff working in the facility.
The government dismissed the doctors call out of hand.
Ruddocks department callously declared that health services
in the Manus camp were better than those the asylum seekers were
accustomed to and therefore the refugees, including the children,
would stay put, indefinitely.
The first press account of the conditions at the Lombrum military
air base, 400 kilometres north of the PNG mainland, only appeared
on February 5. Greg Roberts of the Sydney Morning Herald
and Melbourne Age reported that malaria and other potentially
fatal diseases have not been treated on Manus. Doctors at the
islands Lorengau Hospital told him that 15 asylum seekers,
including children aged between five and seven, have malaria.
The doctors said it was likely the detainees caught malaria
on Manus, which has one of the highest rates of infection in the
world. Yet, one doctor reported that it took some time
before staff at the detention centre received essential medication
to treat malaria. No mass immunisations against diseases such
as tuberculosis, cholera and polio have taken place and doctors
suspect that some asylum seekers have tuberculosis and typhoid
fever. An X-ray machine used to screen contagious diseases only
arrived in late January.
Asylum seekers were only treated at Lorengau Hospital, which
is 15 kilometres from the detention centre, because the military
bases medical centre was, as one doctor explained, in a
state of total disrepair. When the asylum seekers
arrived on the island, the medical centre, which is up the hill
from the detention camp, had smashed windows and the insect gauze
had rotted away.
According to a local PNG newsletter, Lorengau Hospital itself,
which caters for the whole of Manus Province, is barely functioning.
Doctors are unable to wash their hands because the water supply
only flows in the morning. Daily temperatures are between 24 and
30 degrees, yet in December the air conditioning unit in the operating
theatre needed fixing.
Media blackout
Roberts was the first Australian journalist to visit the detention
camp, but was unable to enter the facility or speak to the refugees
because of the official media ban. A similar ban applies on Nauru,
the site of the other Australian-funded detention camp in the
South Pacific.
Apart from silencing the refugees rescued by the Adelaide,
preventing them from replying to the governments slanders,
these bans are a clear attempt to prevent coverage of the conditions
prevailing under the Howard governments so-called Pacific
solution, which consists of militarily turning away refugee
boats or forcing their passengers into detention on far-flung
islands.
PNG residents told Roberts that the first group of asylum seekers,
from the Adelaide, believed they were going to Australia
and were very angry once they arrived on Manus. Some
tried to claw their way over the barbed wire fences, and 20 detainees
staged a hunger strike.
Popai David and Klopil Komet travelled by boat to observe the
scene. We saw them trying to get out, screaming that they
did not want to be there, that they were promised they were going
to Australia, David said.
Komet said detainees tried to get over the barbed wire fence,
but were cut up. They had blood all over them.
PNG soldiers pointed guns at them and threatened to shoot them
if they did not get off the fences. Komet remarked that he felt
sorry for them. They were really frightened.
In late January, another 140 asylum seekers were airlifted
to Manus from Christmas Island, adding to the 218 refugees already
on the island. The refugees are housed in converted shipping containers
covered with green cladding. Private security guards with walkie-talkies
and batons circle the perimeter. Refugees considered ringleaders
have been forcibly isolated from other detainees.
Roberts saw signs on the detention camp fence saying our
children are not going to die here and we refuse to
live here. Other signs visible in photographs published
in the Age and Herald read: Whats our
crime, why are we in jail?, We ask the United Nations
to get us out of here and Where are human rights?.
At the behest of the Howard government, the PNG administration
has barred the detainees from obtaining legal assistance. Lucas
Kuwah, a PNG law student, has been trying to gain access to the
centre for three months, on behalf of PNG and Australian lawyers
who wish to assist them.
Kuwah described the treatment of the detainees as unjust. First
they are forced against their will to come here, then they get
here and there is not enough protection against disease and hardly
anything of a hospital. The refugees have no right to appeal
to any outside agency against rejection of their asylum claims.
It is little wonder that the refugees from Iraq, Palestine,
Turkey, Iran and Bangladesh are outraged and frustrated. They
fled their own countries to escape political persecution and economic
backwardness, but are now caged on a malaria-infested island that
lacks the most basic infrastructure. Manus Province is the most
isolated and least visited in PNG. Lorengau, its only significant
town, has barely 4,500 people. Ninety-five percent of the provinces
people live in villages and depend upon subsistence farming and
fishing. Even Deputy Governor Job Pomat does not have electricity
access and washes his clothes in a stream.
Yet, Howard and Ruddock are intent on expanding the Manus camp
and extending its use indefinitely. In return for cash payments,
the government of PNG, a former Australian colony, recently agreed
to house up to 1,000 refugees there for 12 months, and construction
is underway to extend the centre. Asylum seekers could be incarcerated
there for many years. The Manus Island Deputy Premier said it
could be two years or three years or more [if] there are
problems for Australia in finding places for these people to go.
Ruddock, who visited Manus with Labor Party immigration spokesperson
Julia Gillard just before the first news report, insisted that,
the level of care was of a very high order. He declared
there were no malaria cases on the island, refuting the hospitals
report of 15 cases. He contradicted his own departmental spokeswomen,
who said there were five confirmed cases of malaria among
asylum seekers in Manus. After returning from the trip,
Gillard backed Ruddock, saying the conditions in the centres were
not bad compared to third world refugee centres.
See Also:
Australian government drops threat to
bar UN visit to detention centre
[20 February 2002]
Howard's dirty tricks campaign committee
How the Australian election was subverted
[19 February 2002]
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