Aussie Senate committee says Nauru immigration camp unsafe
Sydney: An Australian immigration camp on the Pacific island of Nauru is inadequate and unsafe, a Senate committee said Monday as it called for the government to remove children from the centre.
Submissions to the inquiry, which the government has dismissed as a political ‘stunt’, have included allegations of rape and other abuse at the camp which is funded by Australia.
In its report, the committee said it was not its task to examine Australia’s policy of refusing to accept asylum-seekers arriving by boat and instead send them to Nauru and Papua New Guinea.
‘The committee is nevertheless of the overall view that the present conditions and circumstances at the Regional Processing Centre (RPC) on Nauru are not adequate, appropriate or safe for the asylum-seekers detained there,’ the report states.
The committee urged Australia to make tangible improvements to living conditions at the camp which is home to more than 630 asylum-seekers, saying it could not abdicate responsibility to another country or to contractors.
‘The government should develop a plan for the removal of children from the Nauru RPC as soon as possible, with their families where they have them, to appropriate arrangements in the community,’ it added.
The report said that all allegations of misconduct and abuse must be independently investigated as it also called for reasonable media access to the processing centre on Nauru.
A dissenting report by government senators said that the majority of members on the committee, in which the opposition Labor Party and Greens outnumbered the government, had been ‘willing to accept untested and unsubstantiated submissions as fact’.
‘All members of the committee appreciate the seriousness of the allegations put to the committee; however it is important to note that the veracity of many of the allegations made was not able to be tested,’ they said.
The government was already implementing the recommendations of a review released in March and had taken steps to improve child protection for those minors in detention, they said.
Australia has been under pressure over its hardline asylum-seeker policies under which those arriving on people-smuggling boats are transferred to centres on Nauru and Papua New Guinea.
The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees last year slammed the facilities on PNG’s Manus Island and Nauru, saying they failed to meet international standards and amounted to arbitrary detention in breach of international law.