Australia Is Deliberately Ignoring the Abuse of Refugees on Nauru, Report Finds
Casey Quackenbush @caseyquack
3:17 AM ET
The barren and bankrupt island state of the Republ
Tortsten Blackwood—AFP/Getty Images The barren and bankrupt island state of the Republic of Nauru on Sept. 11, 2001
"Few other countries go to such lengths to deliberately inflict suffering on people seeking safety and freedom"
RECOMMENDED FOR YOU
As
a young Wellesley grad, the future presidential nominee was featured in
at least two round-ups of the year's best commencement addresses
As a young Wellesley grad, the future presidential nominee was…
BILLY GRAHAM’S SAD LAST DAYS
Promoted
BILLY GRAHAM’S SAD LAST DAYS
Recommended by
A
joint investigation by Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch has
found that the Australian government is deliberately ignoring reports
of abuse from refugees on Nauru in order to deter further migration, the
groups said Tuesday.
The joint report detailed accounts of
mistreatment and neglect from asylum seekers on the remote Pacific
island, including denial of medical care, physical and sexual abuse from
locals and inhumane living conditions. The report also highlighted the
prevalence of mental-health problems, with many refugees attempting
suicide.
“Australia’s policy of exiling asylum seekers who arrive
by boat is cruel in the extreme,” said Anna Neistat, senior director for
research at Amnesty International, who conducted the investigation on
the island for the organization. “Few other countries go to such lengths
to deliberately inflict suffering on people seeking safety and
freedom.”
About 1,200 people, who tried to seek asylum in
Australia by boat, have been forcibly sent to Nauru, a tiny island about
4,000 km off the northeastern Australian coast. The Australian
government’s policy of detaining asylum seekers in offshore processing
centers has long been a subject of controversy.
“Driving adult and
even child refugees to the breaking point with sustained abuse appears
to be one of Australia’s aims on Nauru,” said Michael Bochenek, senior
counsel on children’s rights at Human Rights Watch.
According to the Australian Broadcast Corp., the report will be used as part of a global campaign to close the detention center.
“What I found on Nauru is what I can only describe as a deliberate, systematic abuse,” said Neistat.
Australia
has been transferring asylum seekers to Nauru since 2012, and in the
2015 fiscal year spent the equivalent of $314 million on its operations
there, according to the report.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)

No comments:
Post a Comment