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Manus To Close, But Where To For The Detainees?

18 Aug 2016
By Dr Amy Maguire
#RefugeesArePeople Perth walk 
PHOTO CREDIT: Louise Coghill. (Flickr) Creative Commons

The Manus Island Regional Processing Centre—one of the two key sites of Australia’s offshore immigration detention regime—will close. A date is not set, nor any arrangement confirmed for resettling the 854 men still detained there, but after more than three months, the Australian and the Papua New Guinean governments jointly announced the centre’s closure this week. However, the fate of the detainees’ kept there is more uncertain than ever.

In April 2016, the Papua New Guinea Supreme Court found the detention arrangement on Manus Island was unconstitutional. PNG Prime Minister Peter O’Neill immediately asked Australia to make alternative arrangements for the detainees, implying Australia is responsible for what happens to them.

Where will the detainees go?

Australia’s Minister for Immigration, Peter Dutton, has confirmed “no-one” detained on Manus Island “will ever be settled in Australia”. Instead, the Australian government says the detainees must either resettle in PNG or return to their countries of origin.

Australia’s continued insistence that it will never resettle asylum seekers arriving by boat ignores practical realities. PNG is unable to provide a safe environment for refugees. Australia has not made any suitable third-party arrangement. The “Cambodia solution” has been a costly failure: that impoverished country has been unable to provide social protections for refugees.

Of those whose claims have been processed—about half of those detained on Manus—98 per cent have been confirmed as refugees. The others await proper processing under the UN Refugee Convention.

Australia’s argument that refugees and asylum seekers can go back to their country of origin risks their return to persecution. The prohibition on refoulement—the return of refugees to the site of persecution—is the fundamental principle of international refugee law.

What does human rights law demand?

Asylum seekers arriving by boat are often characterised as “queue-jumpers” trying to enter through “the back door”. It bears repetition that, in fleeing persecution in their home countries, refugees are asserting their legal right to seek asylum.

International law does not give asylum seekers or refugees standing to hold countries accountable for human rights violations. Australia exploits this impunity to maintain practices that violate international law.

Yet despite their incapacity to bring claims against Australia, asylum seekers detained offshore are entitled to a range of universal rights and freedoms. These include:

  • freedom from torture and inhuman or degrading treatment;
  • freedom from punitive detention;
  • judicial oversight of their detention;
  • freedom from forced deportation;
  • access to quality health care, education and work; and
  • special protection for the rights of children and families.

Australia has demonstrated its willingness to ignore or reject international criticism of its violation of these rights.

A reorientation in asylum seeker policy?

Only hours before the Manus centre closure was announced, protesters interrupted Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull’s speech to CEDA.

They demanded:

For God’s sake, Malcolm, close the fucking camps.

Rallies are planned around Australia this month to call for an end to mandatory detention.

Pressure on the government is building from all quarters. Risking prosecution under anti-whistleblower legislation, 103 current and former Manus Island and Nauru staff have publicly demanded closure of the centres. They argue the evidence is clear: Australia’s practice is systematically breaking those subject to it.

Following the leaking of the Nauru files this month, the UN High Commissioner for Refugees has called for the removal of all detainees to humane conditions. Migration experts argue the only humane option is to close the centres and process asylum claims in Australia.

Critics have noted the gulf  between political responses to the abuse scandal in Northern Territory youth detention facilities—which immediately triggered a royal commission—and the 2,116 reports detailing abuse, assault, self-harm and inadequate living standards suffered by detainees on Nauru.

Key NGOs argue the royal commission into institutional child sexual abuse must extend its inquiry to Nauru.

Is it possible that the announcement of the Manus centre’s closure indicates government acceptance that the offshore detention system is—as refugee advocates claim—broken?

Is the government searching for an alternative to offshore detention as public outrage grows? If so, it seems certain it will never admit as much.

What the Manus closure should mean for Nauru

It is essential that Australia comes to acknowledge the harms it has inflicted on thousands of vulnerable people who have committed no crime. In the short term, though, the most urgent priority must be the proper processing and appropriate resettlement of those still detained on Manus Island and Nauru.

The Manus closure was perhaps inevitable once the Supreme Court found PNG lacked authority to detain asylum seekers transferred there by Australia. No such judgment has been forthcoming in Nauru, but evidence reveals the suffering of people detained there under Australia’s authority.

It will be impossible for Australia to maintain its hardline approach to refugees indefinitely while representing itself as a responsible international citizen.

The first step in a reorientation of asylum policy must be the abandonment of offshore processing. Until this occurs, Australia cannot take responsibility for a process that it has shaped, or its consequences.

The major parties are largely united on refugee policy, although cracks are appearing. They are locked into practices that assume, despite a lack of evidence, offshore processing of some asylum seekers deters others others from attempting the journey.

The government also refuses to acknowledge that onshore processing of asylum claims is not a guaranteed path to permanent settlement in Australia. Regionally focused alternative strategies have been proposed. These ought to be negotiated among regional partners with the support of the UNHCR.

Mandatory offshore detention is not the only way to manage refugee flows. And it is clearly not the humane or legal response.

The announcement that the Manus centre will close provides an opportunity for Australia to assess alternatives. Political leaders could choose to open a new public dialogue to bring about reform. Whether they have the will to pursue such a process or not, they have the power to bring Australian law and practice into line with our international legal obligations.

Dr Amy Maguire is a lecturer in international law at the University of Newcastle Law School. The article originally appeared on The Conversation on 18 August and is republished with permission.