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Australia: Demands grow for closure of Villawood detention
centre
By Richard Phillips
24 January 2008
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A recent report by the Human Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission
(HREOC) has underscored the repressive character of Australias
migration policies and fueled calls for the Rudd Labor government
to abolish Australias mandatory immigration detention laws.
HREOCs annual survey of Australian immigration detention
centres was produced following visits to mainland facilities between
August and November 2007. The human rights organisation did not
visit the detention centre on Christmas Island and was prevented
by former Howard government Immigration Minister Kevin Andrews
from inspecting facilities on Nauru, where almost 100 asylum seekers
were being held.
In its report, HREOC repeated its previous demands for the
repeal of Australias mandatory detention policy and called
for refugees and asylum seekers to be released and allowed to
live in alternative community accommodation or issued with bridging
visas.
The report stated: While detention may be acceptable
for a short period in order to conduct security, identity and
health checks, currently mandatory detention laws require
detention for more than these purposes, for unlimited
periods of time and in the absence of independent review
of the need to detain [Emphasis in report].
Australia is the only country in the world that detains all
people entering or remaining within its borders without a valid
visa. The policy was introduced by the Keating Labor government
in 1992, with amending legislation in 1994 allowing for indefinite
detention.
The Howard government expanded Labors inhuman legislation
and incarcerated thousands of refugees and asylum seekers, including
children, from 1996 until November 2007. During this time over
240 Australian citizens, permanent residents and lawful visa holders
were also detained, in contravention of Australian migration laws.
The HREOC report singled out the Villawood Immigration Detention
Centre in Sydneys western suburbs for particular criticism.
Villawood is the countrys largest immigration detention
facility and currently holds 244 detainees, with 11 more in neighbouring
Sydney Immigration Residential Housing. In 2004 it housed almost
500 refugees and asylum seekers.
HREOC called for the immediate closure of Villawoods
Stage 1 security facility, describing it as a disgrace,
and repeating previous demands that it be demolished.
Stage 1 holds Section 501 detainees and those suffering
from serious mental health problems. Section 501 detainees
are permanent residents whose visas have been cancelled on the
grounds of bad character and are due to be deported.
Under the local Migration Act any visa-holder who has served
a 12-month or longer prison term in Australia is deemed to be
of bad character and deported to their respective
countries of origin. The definition applies to anyone who has
served even multiple short-term sentences, once these add up to
12 months, over an unlimited period. Many of the Section 501 inmates
are long-term residents, some who have lived in Australia for
most of their lives, but who never became Australian citizens.
HREOC said that Stage 1 was harsh and inhospitable
and the most prison-like of all facilities. It described
the visitors area as bleak and the outdoor grounds
and one of the dormitories as dark, depressing and lacking privacy.
The facilitys dining room has no windows or natural light.
Human Rights Commissioner Graeme Innes told the media: The
length and indefinite nature of detention has a clear link on
the impact of peoples mental health, thats well established.
Weve recommended the use of alternatives, such as residential
housing in or near the detention centres, residential determinations,
bridging visas or giving people visas more quickly.
Innes criticised immigration centres in Sydney, Melbourne and
Perth for cutting back group excursions over the past year. This,
he said, led to increased mental health problems amongst all detainees
and, in particular, substantial distress and unrest at Villawood.
The human rights commissioner said that one man in Villawood
was informed that his girl-friend had been injured in a
car accident but his request to visit her in hospital was refused.
For several days, the man threatened to kill himself.
Refugee support organisations have reported that last year
several Section 501 inmates undertook hunger strikes and other
self-harm protests when Villawood management introduced measures
aimed at stopping internal protests at the facility during the
2007 federal election campaign.
Pertev Yigit, a Turkish Kurdish asylum seeker, was transferred
from the Stage 2 to the Stage 1 facility after authorities discovered
an orange jumpsuit in his bedroom. Yigit planned to wear the jumpsuit
as a protest, comparing his continued detention with that of detainees
in Guantánamo Bay.
A few days later, management insisted that Stage 1 inmates
be handcuffed when taken out of the facility. When authorities
attempted to put handcuffs on Hanna Touk, a Turkish detainee,
for a trip to the Family Court, he slashed his arms, hands and
stomach and then went on hunger strike. Touk had been taken from
the detention centre on many previous occasions and was not considered
a security risk.
The human consequences of Australias repressive migration
laws were tragically quantified on January 13 with the death of
a 62-year-old Iranian held in Villawood. The man, known as Pishehvar,
had been held in Villawoods Stage 1 facility for three months
pending his deportation under Section 501 of the Migration Act.
Despite persistent appeals by other inmates for Pishehvar to
receive urgent hospital treatment and surgery for a serious heart
condition, he was not provided with adequate care and died two
days after being admitted to St Georges Private Hospital
on January 11.
Labor to maintain policy
HREOCs investigation follows a report last month by the
Commonwealth Ombudsman, Professor John McMillan, which revealed
that the Immigration Department had falsely advised numerous visa
applicants that they could not appeal against decisions refusing
to allow them to stay in Australia.
McMillan reviewed 1,800 notifications of unsuccessful visa
applications and found that the information in many of the letters
was overly complex, confusing and poorly presented.
In some cases, he said, applicants were not properly advised of
their rights and could have had their visa refusal reviewed. Some
could have been permitted to stay in Australia.
In July last year the Ombudsman reported that some of the more
than 240 people falsely held by immigration authorities were detained
simply because the person had an accent, was not of Anglo-Saxon
appearance or could not be located on [the departments]
systems.
While the exposure of these cases has increased demands for
an end to mandatory detention, the Rudd Labor government has no
intention of meeting them.
Minister for Immigration Chris Evans has responded to the HREOC
and Ombudsman reports with promises that he will institute cultural
change within his department. But his statements are meaningless.
The Labor party initiated the cruel and repressive practice
of mandatory detention and provided more than a decade of unwavering
bi-partisan support to the Howard governments migration
policies. It has no intention of making any fundamental changes.
Like its predecessor, Labors policy is to maintain mandatory
detention and all associated legislation, as well as the former
governments anti-refugee rhetoric and border protection
measures.
This week Evans was asked by journalists whether Labor would
reverse the Howard governments excision of 4,000 islandsincluding
Magnetic and Dunk islands in Queenslandfrom Australias
migration zone. The policy was introduced to deny so-called unauthorised
arrivals any legal right to apply for an Australian visa
and any recourse to Australian courts. It also allows the government
to move them to another country.
Evans said that while the government had made no final decision,
Labor would retain the excision of Ashmore Reef and Christmas
Island, where a new and expanded 400-bed detention centre is currently
under construction. This means that, under the new Labor government,
hundreds of refugees and asylum-seekersmen, women and childrenstruggling
to secure protection and a new life will continue to be incarcerated
hundreds of kilometres from Australian shores in violation of
their basic rights and international protocols.
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