Julie Deisher at 8:22 AM ET
Saturday, August 24, 2013
UN rights experts: Australia refugee detention a human rights violation
UN rights experts: Australia refugee detention a human rights violation
Julie Deisher at 8:22 AM ET
[JURIST] The UN Human Rights Committee [official website] declared
[press release] Thursday that Australia's indefinite detention of 46
recognized refugees on security grounds amounted to cruel, inhuman and
degrading treatment. The refugees, who have been detained for at least
two-and-a-half years, brought their complaints to the Committee when
they were unable to challenge the legality of their detention in
Australian courts. The Committee, composed of 18 independent human
rights experts, found that the refugees' detention was arbitrary and
violated Article 9 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights
(ICCPR) [text], which states that no one shall be subjected to
arbitrary arrest or detention, based on the fact that the refugees were
not told the reasons for the negative security assessment, preventing
them from mounting an effective legal challenge to their detention.
Seven of the refugees who filed complaints with the Committee have since
been released.
Australia's laws and policies governing the treatment of migrants
continue to raise human rights concerns. Spokespersons for the UN Office of the High Commissioner on Human Rights (OHCHR) and the UN High Commissioner of Refugees (UNHCR) [official websites] had previously expressed concerns
[JURIST report] that the reopening of offshore detention centers to
process migrants and asylum-seekers may lead to indefinite detention and
human rights violations. In November 2006 the High Court of Australia [official website] ruled
[JURIST report] in two separate cases that a "holder of a temporary
protection visa is not entitled to further protection in Australia if
they are no longer in danger in the country from which they fled" and
that the person may not remain a refugee, allowing the Australian
government to repatriate those deemed no longer to be in danger. In 2005
the UNHCR criticized Australia
[JURIST report] for its strict policy of detaining illegal immigrants,
refugees and asylum seekers, with illegal immigrants and asylum seekers
spending years in remote detention camps while their applications for
granting refugee status are assessed.
Julie Deisher at 8:22 AM ET
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