Australian immigration detention facilities
Australian immigration detention facilities comprise a number of different facilities located throughout Australia, including on the Australian territory of Christmas Island. Such facilities also exist in Papua New Guinea and Nauru, namely the Nauru Regional Processing Centre and the Manus Regional Processing Centre.
The facilities are currently used to detain people who are under Australia's policy of mandatory immigration detention. Asylum seekers detected in boats in Australian waters have been detained in facilities on the offshore islands of Nauru and Manus Island, previously under the now-defunct Pacific Solution, and then under Operation Sovereign Borders.
The facilities' existence has been controversial, and they have been condemned on human rights grounds and even likened to concentration camps by some critics and human rights groups. The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees has cited these centres as a "damning indictment of a policy meant to avoid Australia's international obligations".
Background
The Migration Act 1958 allowed discretionary detention of unauthorised arrivals until 1992. Since the 1990s when the Keating government created a policy of mandatory detention of unauthorised arrivals, with non-citizens arriving by boat without a valid visa being detained until they were either granted a visa, or deported.Towards the end of the 1990s, a large increase in the number of unauthorised arrivals exceeded the capacity of the existing Immigration Reception and Processing Centres at Port Hedland and Curtin.
Facilities
Immigration Detention Centres (IDCs)
Immigration detention centres detain people who have overstayed their visa, breached their visa conditions and had their visa cancelled or have been refused entry at Australia's entry ports. This includes irregular maritime arrivals claiming asylum without passports, identity papers or valid entry visas. Under the Migration Act 1958, people arriving in this manner are classed as unlawful non-citizens and are currently subject to mandatory detention. However, in 1954 the Australian government ratified the United Nations Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees. Under Article 31 of the convention, the Australian government is legally obligated to grant anyone fleeing persecution and seeking asylum the right to enter the country by whatever means possible. Furthermore, the Article states that signatory countries are not to impose penalties on or indefinitely restrict the freedom of movement of those seeking asylum.Australia's Migration Act 1958 requires people who are not Australian citizens and who are unlawfully in Australia to be detained. Unless they are given legal permission to remain in Australia by being granted a visa, unlawful non-citizens must be removed from Australia as soon as reasonably practicable. The Australian government claims that immigration detention is not used to punish people. Instead, they claim it is an administrative function whereby people who do not have a valid visa are detained while their claims to stay are considered or their removal is facilitated.
There are, or were, centres located at:
- Maribyrnong, established at Melbourne in 1966, closed in 2019.
- Villawood, established at Sydney in 1976.
- Perth, established in 1981.
- North West Point, Christmas Island, established 2001.
- Northern, established at Darwin in 2001, closed.
- Baxter, near Port Augusta, SA, established 2002, closed 2007.
- Brisbane, established in 2007 as Brisbane Immigration Transit Accommodation
- Melbourne, established in 2008 as Melbourne Immigration Transit Accommodation
- Wickham Point, established at Darwin in 2011, closed in 2016.
- Curtin, near Derby, WA, reopened in 2010, closed in 2014.
- Scherger, near Weipa, Queensland, opened 2010, closed 2014.
- Adelaide, established in 2011 as Adelaide Immigration Transit Accommodation
- Yongah Hill, near Northam, WA, established in 2012.
Immigration Residential Housing (IRH)
- Perth
- Sydney
- Port Augusta
Immigration Transit Accommodation (ITA)
- Brisbane
- Melbourne
- Adelaide
Alternative Places of Detention (APOD)
Pacific Solution facilities
Since the implementation of the Pacific Solution Australia also funded immigration detention centres on:- Manus Regional Processing Centre, Papua New Guinea closed in February 2008, re-opened on 22 November 2012.
- Nauru Regional Processing Centre closed in February 2008, re-opened in 2012.
Services to immigration centres
Manus Regional Processing Centre was operated by the International Organization for Migration, then by G4S, then by Broadspectrum with security sub-contracted to Wilson Security.
Nauru Regional Processing Centre was operated by Broadspectrum and Wilson Security, and then later by Canstruct International and finally by a Nauruan Government Commercial Entity.
The 3 new immigration detention facilities in Lorengau on Manus Island have security and some services provided by Paladin Group under a contract worth more than $423 million.
Christmas Island Immigration Detention Centre was once operated by G4S but is now operated by Serco as of April 2019.
Controversy
The facilities have been a source of much controversy during their time of operation. There have been a number of riots and escapes, as well as accusations of human rights abuses from organisations such as refugee advocates, Amnesty International, the Australian Human Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission, Human Rights Watch, and the United Nations. Journalists are forbidden from entering the detention centres.In January 2014, the Australian Labor Party and the Australian Greens accused the government of a cover-up over a violent clash on 18 October 2013 at the Manus Island facility between the Papua New Guinea army and the Papua New Guinea police mobile squad hired for the facility's security, leading to Australian expatriate staff being evacuated, while local staff and asylum seekers remained. On 5 May 2014, it was reported that several Salvation Army staffers had alleged that refugees were regularly subjected to beatings, racial slurs, and sexual assaults within the facility.
In March 2002, Irene Khan, the Secretary General of Amnesty International, said:
Refugee "swap" with the United States
In 2016 the Australian government announced an intention to exchange some proven refugees from either Nauru and/or Manus Island for certain displaced people presently in Central America as part of an agreement with the Obama administration of the United States.In early 2017, Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull announced that he was confident the agreement would proceed, despite the change of President to Donald Trump. However, latest information appears to cast doubt on the willingness of the US government to honour any such agreement, especially in light of Trump's executive order suspending entry to the US from several countries.
On 2 February 2017, Australian news outlets, quoting the Washington Post, reported that a telephone conversation between Trump and Turnbull had been acrimonious in relation to the "swap", and that Trump had terminated the call ahead of time. Trump has expressed admiration over the detention facilities, opining that the US should do the same.
On 4 February 2019, the remaining 4 children who had been detained on Nauru were sent to the U.S.
In May 2019, it was revealed that some of the U.S. detainees sent to Australia in the "swap", were Rwandan men, former members of the Army for the Liberation of Rwanda, who had been accused of mass-murdering tourists in 1999. They had been held in U.S. immigration detention for over 15 years, but were on the verge of being released into the U.S. after a court ruled that their confessions had been obtained by torture. In November 2018 the men were secretly brought to Australia. The Turnbull government knew about the allegations against the men when they agreed to accept them. The Australian and U.S. Governments initially refused to comment on the matter, but later Prime Minister Scott Morrison said that the men had been assessed by security agencies.
The former New Zealand foreign affairs minister Gerry Brownlee described Australia's behaviour as "incredibly insensitive" and said that New Zealand would have "appreciated a heads up" that Australia was about to resettle men accused of brutally murdering two New Zealanders .