The Nauru files: cache of 2,000 leaked reports reveal scale of abuse of children in Australian offshore detention
Exclusive:
The largest cache of documents to be leaked from within Australia’s
asylum seeker detention regime details assaults, sexual assaults and
self-harm
Read the Nauru files in a unique database
Children on Nauru
Allegations
involving children make up more than 50% of the 2,000 leaked reports of
the Nauru files from the detention centre on the remote Pacific island.
Composite: The Guardian Design
Paul Farrell, Nick Evershed and Helen Davidson
Wednesday 10 August 2016 07.59 BST
Last modified on Wednesday 10 August 2016 08.30 BST
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The
devastating trauma and abuse inflicted on children held by Australia in
offshore detention has been laid bare in the largest cache of leaked
documents released from inside its immigration regime.
More than
2,000 leaked incident reports from Australia’s detention camp for asylum
seekers on the remote Pacific island of Nauru – totalling more than
8,000 pages – are published by the Guardian today. The Nauru files set
out as never before the assaults, sexual abuse, self-harm attempts,
child abuse and living conditions endured by asylum seekers held by the
Australian government, painting a picture of routine dysfunction and
cruelty.
The Guardian’s analysis of the files reveal that children
are vastly over-represented in the reports. More than half of the 2,116
reports – a total of 1,086 incidents, or 51.3% – involve children,
although children made up only about 18% of those in detention on Nauru
during the time covered by the reports, May 2013 to October 2015. The
findings come just weeks after the brutal treatment of young people in
juvenile detention in the Northern Territory was exposed, leading to the
Australian prime minister, Malcolm Turnbull, announcing a wide-ranging
public inquiry.
The Nauru files: the lives of asylum seekers in detention detailed in a unique database – interactive
Read incident reports written by staff in Australia’s immigration detention centre on Nauru
Read more
The
reports range from a guard allegedly grabbing a boy and threatening to
kill him once he is living in the community to guards allegedly slapping
children in the face. In September 2014 a teacher reported that a young
classroom helper had requested a four-minute shower instead of a
two-minute shower. “Her request has been accepted on condition of sexual
favours. It is a male security person. She did not state if this has or
hasn’t occurred. The security officer wants to view a boy or girl
having a shower.”
Some reports contain distressing examples of
behaviour by traumatised children. According to a report from September
2014, a girl had sewn her lips together. A guard saw her and began
laughing at her. In July that year a child under the age of 10 undressed
and invited a group of adults to insert their fingers into her vagina;
in February 2015 a young girl gestured to her vagina and said a male
asylum seeker “cut her from under”.
In the files there are seven
reports of sexual assault of children, 59 reports of assault on
children, 30 of self-harm involving children and 159 of threatened
self-harm involving children.
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The children of Nauru: ‘What’s the point of surviving at sea if you die in here?’
The
reports show extraordinary acts of desperation. One pregnant woman,
after being told she would need to give birth on Nauru in October 2015,
was agitated and in tears. “I give my baby to Australia to look after,”
she pleaded with a caseworker, adding: “I don’t want to have my baby in
PNG, the [Nauru hospital] or have it in this dirty environment.”
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The
files raise stark questions about how information is reported on Nauru,
one of Australia’s two offshore detention centres for asylum seekers
who arrive by boat. They highlight serious concerns about the ongoing
risks to children and adults held on the island. They show how the
Australian government has failed to respond to warning signs and reveal
sexual assault allegations – many involving children – that have never
been previously disclosed.
The most damning evidence emerges from
the words of the staff working in the detention centre themselves – the
people who compile the reports. These caseworkers, guards, teachers and
medical officers have been charged with caring for hundreds of asylum
seekers on the island.
The publication is likely to renew calls
for an end to the political impasse that has seen children in
Australia’s care languish on Nauru for more than three years.
Nauru
is the world’s smallest island state, home to fewer than 10,000 people.
Australia supplies aid and buys services from Nauru’s government and
companies, leading to accusations Nauru is effectively a “client state”.
On the last official count at the end of June, 442 people – 338 men, 55
women and 49 children – were held in the Nauru regional processing
centre. The other offshore centre, on Manus Island in Papua New Guinea,
was holding 854 people, all men. Australia’s policy has been criticised
regularly by the UN.
The Guardian is publishing the files because
it believes Australians have the right to know more about the regime at
the Nauru and Manus centres, which costs Australian taxpayers $1.2bn a
year.
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The documents cover the period examined in a
review into allegations of sexual assault, the Australian Human Rights
Commission’s inquiry into children in detention as well as the period
examined by a Senate inquiry and beyond. They encompass the final days
of Labor’s time in government and the ruling conservative Coalition’s
time in office since September 2013.
In each successive inquiry,
the Australian government and its contractors, including Broadspectrum
(formerly Transfield Services) and its subcontractor Wilson Security,
have maintained that they are improving conditions and reporting
measures to raise the quality of life on the island.
In April 2015
the Australian immigration minister, Peter Dutton, said he wanted to
make Nauru a “safe environment”. He said he had “instructed the
department to do whatever they possibly can, both domestically within
the detention network here and with our partners in the regional
processing centres, to make sure that the standard of care is as high as
it possibly can be”.
Wilson Security has previously told the
Australian parliament it had “robust policies, procedures and processes
that support the operations in Nauru”.
It continued: “Allegations
of sexual assault are treated in a timely and sensitive manner. Where
Wilson Security receives an allegation we take immediate action
following disclosure or notification.”
But the files show a very
different picture. Rather than serious events diminishing, they
continued – and in some cases escalated – during the course of 2015. A
vast number of incidents from across the timeframe have never before
been reported.
A short history of Nauru, Australia’s dumping ground for refugees
Its
phosphate reserves once made a speck in the Pacific one of the richest
countries on Earth. Today Nauru is broke, barren and beholden to its
neighbour
Read more
Many asylum seekers held on Nauru were
unable to leave the detention compounds during the period covered by the
files. Some had been granted permission to leave on day trips but were
closely monitored to ensure they returned before curfews. Those found to
be refugees were released into the Nauruan community – yet still remain
effectively detained on the remote island.
The primary evidence
from the files backs up testimony from former immigration detention
staff members interviewed by the Guardian as part of its investigation.
Access
to Nauru is tightly controlled. Events on the island are reported
sporadically through refugee advocates and whistleblowers, but the
Australian government’s policy of shrouding its offshore detention
centres in secrecy has prevented the reporting of many serious
incidents. The Nauru files shatter that secrecy.
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In
response to the Nauru files, the Australian Department of Immigration
and Border Protection said in a statement: “The Australian government
continues to support the Nauruan government to provide for the health,
welfare and safety of all transferees and refugees in Nauru.
“The
documents published today are evidence of the rigorous reporting
procedures that are in place in the regional processing centre –
procedures under which any alleged incident must be recorded, reported
and where necessary investigated. Many of the incident reports reflect
unconfirmed allegations or uncorroborated statements and claims – they
are not statements of proven fact.
“All alleged criminal incidents
within the regional processing centre are referred to the Nauru Police
Force (NPF) for investigation. Refugees living in the community are
encouraged to report all criminal incidents to the NPF. A number of
matters remain under active investigation.
“The department is
examining the matters published today to ensure all of these matters
have been reported appropriately by service providers, consistent with
the policies and procedures covering such matters.”
The department
added that it “also takes seriously its role in supporting the
government of Nauru to protect children from abuse, neglect or
exploitation”.
Sexual violence and threats
Allegations of
sexual assault, particularly against young women, are a persistent theme
of the files. In one report an asylum seeker described being told she
was “on a list” written by local Nauruan guards naming single women they
were “waiting for”. “She has received offers to get her pregnant when
she gets out,” the caseworker wrote.
They reveal allegations of
misconduct by Wilson Security guards at the detention centre. In one
report a “cultural adviser” for Wilson Security, the company that
employs guards at the detention camp, allegedly told an asylum seeker
who had been sexually assaulted in camp that “rape in Australia is very
common and people don’t get punished”.
The caseworker who filed
the report wrote that the female asylum seeker also told her the guard
had questioned whether the sexual assault had occurred and said: “If
that happened to you why didn’t you scream at the time?”
“You have
to take it out of your head if you go into Nauru then he [the alleged
perpetrator] could be your neighbour or if you go to Cambodia then he
could be on the plane next to you,” the adviser reportedly told the
woman. “You also have to teach your son to treat this man nicely.”
The detention centre on Nauru
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Secrecy
is tight in the Australian-run detention centre on Nauru. Taking photos
– even carrying a smartphone with a camera – is banned
There are
allegations that bus drivers – employed by Australia’s detention
contractors – took voyeuristic pictures of women in the camp to use to
masturbate. Other reports range from a man facing threats of sexual
violence from other asylum seekers to a woman threatening self-harm
because she doesn’t want “men to touch her body”.
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Speaking
before the publication of the Nauru files, Prof Louise Newman, a former
member of the Immigration Health Advisory Group, says such attacks have
continued. She speaks “on a nightly basis” to women on Nauru who have
been sexually assaulted.
“I am prepared to say the sexual assault
of women is a major problem on Nauru,” Newman says. “Some of the women’s
descriptions of what is happening to them is incredibly alarming in
terms of the lack of process.
“It’s not just one incident. If it
was one incident and there had been a poor response in a developing
nation then maybe it was something to work on. I think what we’re seeing
is a systemic lack of processes and understanding of this.”
Trauma and self-harm
Health
and medical experts have consistently warned of the mental harm caused
by prolonged detention. The files show in graphic detail how this harm
has manifested.
One man asked a caseworker where he could buy
bullets so he could get someone else to shoot him. A woman sharpened a
pencil with a razor blade, then cut her wrists. Another wrapped a rope
around her neck and tried to hang herself. She had to be held up by
guards until she could be cut down.
In one report from January
2015, a teenage girl struggled to cope after her mother’s miscarriage.
She began having “ongoing hallucinations from a ‘small person’ ”, a Save
the Children worker wrote.
“She is unsure if it is a man or women
but has a dark face and is the size of a child.” The hallucination had
threatened to kill her: “At other times the hallucination is encouraging
[REDACTED] to kill herself.”
The toll on children’s mental health
is particularly heavy. According to an April 2015 report a girl began
screaming “uncontrollably” during a fight in a recreation tent.
“During
this time [REDACTED] also gouged at her own face consistently and
pulled her own hair,” the child protection officer wrote. “It was
observed that [REDACTED] could not breath properly and had a glazed look
in her eyes.”
‘I want death’: Nauru files chronicle despair of asylum seeker children
The
voices of children emerging repeatedly from the official reports betray
the ruin of lives with no signs of respite from Australia’s detention
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Other files show the anguished outbursts to
which some asylum seekers have become prone since their detention: one
report described a woman seeking a bandage after punching a metal pole
with both hands. Another told of a woman who began banging her head with
her fists after an altercation with guards. Another woman carved her
husband’s name on to her chest; she wanted a tattoo but could not get
one so used a knife instead. Her husband lives in Australia.
Speaking
to the Guardian before the publication of the Nauru files, Dr Peter
Young, a former medical director of mental health for Australia’s
immigration detention system, said: “Self-harm and suicide attempts
increase steadily after six months in detention. This is driven by
hopelessness which is known to be the strongest predictor of suicide.
“Some
self-harm, such as lip sewing, has a protest element and is common in
prisoners as an expression of feeling powerless and voiceless.”
Squalor
Other
reports show the squalor and the difficulties getting medical
treatment. One female asylum seeker, who has urinary incontinence,
complained about how she was no longer provided with sanitary pads to
treat the condition.
According to another report a female guard
allegedly refused to let a child under 10 use a toilet and made her
squat on the ground instead. Her mother told a caseworker the guard had
then shone her torch on the girl’s genitals.
Twelve of the most harrowing accounts from the Nauru files – in pictures
View gallery
The
logs illustrate the squalid conditions often experienced by asylum
seekers at the centre, including frequent complaints of cockroaches
infesting tents housing the detainees.
One report showed how the
companies’ failure to communicate traumatises asylum seekers. The
medical provider International Health and Medical Services ran a “mass
casualty simulation” that had people daubed with fake blood walking
around. But the plan was not reported to the Save the Children teachers
at the nearby school.
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“The incident prompted
every student to start talking about incidents of self-harm they had
witnessed,” a teacher wrote. “They did not know this one was false and
so were forced to experience another incident at school, which should be
a safe, distracting environment.”
Nauru files reporting team:
Paul Farrell, Nick Evershed, Helen Davidson, Ben Doherty, Ri Liu, Anna
Livsey, David Constable, Tom Ross, Josh Wall, Nikki Marshall, Merran
Hitchick and Patrick Keneally
• In Australia, the crisis support
service Lifeline is on 13 11 14. In the US, the National Suicide
Prevention Hotline is 1-800-273-8255. In the UK, the Samaritans can be
contacted on 116 123. Hotlines in other countries can be found here
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