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Australian government dismisses damning report on child detention
By Karen Holland
24 June 2004
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The Howard government has dismissed a report by its own Human
Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission (HREOC), which condemned
the mandatory detention of refugee children as cruel, inhumane
and degrading treatment. By rejecting the reports
call for the release of all 90 children still incarcerated, the
government has underscored its determination to keep innocent
children locked up in appalling conditions, purely for base political
reasons.
The 900-page report of the National Inquiry into Children in
Immigration Detention, tabled in parliament on May 13, concluded
that the detention of children resulted in numerous and
repeated breaches of the [United Nations] Convention on the Rights
of the Child. It found that the government had ignored repeated
recommendations by mental health professionals that certain children
be removed from the detention environment with their parents.
It called for a review into Canberras detention of another
74 children on the island of Nauru.
Immigration Minister Amanda Vanstone declared that the reports
recommendations would send a dangerous message to
people smugglers. She claimed it would encourage so-called
smugglers to put more children in boats bound for Australia. Vanstones
response amounts to a blatant defence of yet another breach of
international law because the Refugee Convention forbids the use
of punitive measures to deter asylum seekers. The reality is that
these families have resorted to desperate voyages because they
face intolerable oppression and because the Australian government
has made it virtually impossible to gain refuge any other way.
According to the HREOC report, more than 92 percent of children
who arrived by boat and were kept in detention were eventually
assessed as refugees. In other words, the government has wilfully
compounded the trauma already suffered by children in their countries
of originmainly Iraq, Afghanistan, Iran, the Palestinian
Occupied Territories and Sri Lankaby indefinite incarceration
and denial of basic rights.
The Convention on the Rights of the Child requires that children
be kept in detention only as a measure of last resort
and for the shortest appropriate period of time. However,
the report states that the average period of detention for a child
has increased since 1999, and stood at one year, eight months
and eleven days in December 2003.
The report comments that the government has made the detention
of children the firstand onlyresort. By
denying immediate review of all cases before an independent tribunal,
which is required by the Convention, and by limiting access to
courts, the policy resulted in automatic, indeterminate,
arbitrary and effectively unreviewable detention of children.
No other country in the world has a policy like this.
Children traumatised
HREOC found the detention environment to be unsafe for children.
Child detainees were unprotected from violent situations such
as riots, fires, hunger strikes, protests, self-harm and suicide
attempts. In fact, methods used to suppress the protests and uprisings,
and witnessing staff in riot gear, caused particular stress
to children. Security measures included the use of
tear gas and water cannons and a lock down procedure
used to contain violent situations, where children were often
trapped.
The inquiry established that there is an appalling level of
disturbed mental health among the children. Evidence from many
mental health professionals who had had some contact with detainees
confirmed that the detention environment made it virtually
impossible to meet the mental health needs of children and their
families. Child detainees suffered from clinical depression,
post-traumatic stress disorder and various anxiety disorders.
They exhibited symptoms of bed-wetting, sleep walking and night
terrors.
At the severe end of the spectrum, some children became
mute, refused to eat and drink, made suicide attempts and began
to self-harm, such as by cutting themselves, the report
states.
A child psychiatrist told the inquiry, The traumatic
nature of the detention experience ... has out-stripped any previous
trauma that the children have had. So it has got to the point
where being in detention is the worst thing that has ever happened
to these children.
Evidence was also heard on the effect that detention had on
parents and their ability to care for their children. As well
as the lack of arrangements for normal family life, parents suffered
from guilt for promising their children a better life when instead,
they were thrown into prison. As a result, parents in detention
who were previously effective and competent became depressed,
which meant they were unable to play with their children, read
to them, supervise them or look after their safety.
The report cites a 2003 study of 20 children in a remote detention
centre who had been detained for an average of 28 months. All
but one child were diagnosed with a major depressive disorder
and over half with post-traumatic stress disorder. The symptoms
were almost exclusively related to the experience of trauma in
detention.
A case study details the case of a 10-year-old boy who, according
to a psychiatric nurse employed by Australasian Correctional Management
(ACM), began showing clear signs of severe stress
in May 2002, after spending nearly one year in detention and a
residential housing project. The nurse reported his condition
and recommended that he and his family be released on a bridging
visa. Between May and November, at the Woomera Detention Centre,
the boy tried to hang himself twice and inflicted self-harm on
at least eight occasions.
The Report contains extracts from no less than seven assessments
on the boys deteriorating mental condition made to the Immigration
Department between June and November 2002 by ACM and mental health
professionals. In January 2003, the family was sent to Baxter
Detention Centre and the report cites excerpts from two more reports
on the boys deteriorating condition. The family was finally
granted refugee status on May 25 2004, after more than three years
of mental abuse. According to a newspaper report on May 27, the
boys fathers condition remains catatonic
and he is likely to stay in hospital after the familys release.
Deplorable conditions
The Inquiry found that food, accommodation and hygiene were
often sub-standard, and that the provision of health services
was inadequate. Food was considered unappetising and monotonous,
the provision of baby formula was at times uneven, detainees sometimes
lived in overcrowded conditions and were often used as cheap labour
to clean (they were paid the equivalent of one dollar per
hour).
Health screenings were inadequate. Certain medical conditions
may not have been picked up and there was no regular follow-up
to initial assessments and no routine testing of childrens
sight and hearing. Children said they often felt that their medical
concerns were not being taken seriously and that the standard
recommendation for any ailment was water and Panadol [a
pain killer].
The detention centres were understaffed, with insufficient
trained staff to identify the special medical conditions of asylum
seekers or their children. Interpreters were also lacking, making
communication of important medical information impossible.
The traumatic past of many child detainees, compounded by the
detention environment, significantly affected their ability to
learn. In addition, the education provided was woefully inadequate.
Up to 2002, most children attended on-site schools. The inquiry
reported the following failures: insufficient infrastructure,
inadequate hours of tuition, inadequate assessments and reporting
of childrens progress, lack of an appropriate curriculum
and a shortage of teachers.
One teenage detainee described classroom conditions: There
was only one class and everybody like from five year old and I
were put in the same class. And what they did was put up a photocopy
of some basic mathematics in front of us and they were trying
... to teach me simple addition and these sort of thingsbasic
mathematics.
In September 2002 there were just five teachers employed at
the Woomera Detention centre for over 450 children. In order to
cope, adult detainees without Australian teaching qualifications
were sometimes asked to teach classes. Students received reduced
hours of tuition. After 2002, detained children were increasingly
allowed to attend local schools, but this was not universal.
The inquiry also found that mandatory detention breached the
Convention by denying the special care needed for children with
disabilities and those who were unaccompanied.
Limited recommendations
HREOCs recommendations are based on the assumption that
the detention system will continue. They include: the release
as soon as possible of all children in detention; that the detention
laws be amended as a matter of urgency to comply with
the Convention; and that legislation codify minimum standards
of treatment of child detainees.
Even if these suggestions were implemented, they would come
too late for the many children who have already suffered. The
policy of mandatory detention was introduced more than 10 years
ago by the Keating Labor government.
The inquiry, with its limited terms of reference and unexplained
delays in releasing its report, has essentially served as a political
safety valve for the Howard government. For two-and-a-half years,
vocal opposition to mandatory detention has been substantially
channelled into the inquiry.
In the two years leading up to the governments inquiry,
as unrest built up within detention centres, doctors, psychologists,
social workers, lawyers, church groups and welfare organisations
condemned the official policy. HREOC received eight complaints
during 2001 alone, regarding alleged rough handling of children
by guards and lack of schooling for child detainees.
While the Howard governments refugee policy has become
increasingly discredited, Howard and his ministers have made clear
they remain committed to the mandatory detention of children.
They are being assisted by the opposition Labor Party which, despite
advocating reduced incarceration time for children, confirmed
its support for the underlying system of mandatory detention at
the ALP National Conference in January.
See Also:
People smuggler trial raises
new questions about Canberra's role in refugee deaths
[26 May 2004]
The tragedy of SIEV
X: Did the Australian government deliberately allow 353 refugees
to drown?
[13 August 2002]
Howards dirty
tricks campaign committee: How the Australian election was subverted
[19 February 2002]
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