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UK warned not to replicate Australia’s immigration detention centres

Detainees walk around the compound inside the Manus Island detention centre in Papua New Guinea in 2017.
Detainees walk around the compound inside the Manus Island detention centre in Papua New Guinea in 2017. Photograph: Reuters

Two former detainees in Australia’s notorious offshore immigration detention centres have issued a “dire warning” to UK parliamentarians ahead of a vote to replicate these centres this week.

They are urging MPs not to back the nationality and borders bill which will be debated in parliament on Tuesday and Wednesday. If passed into law in its current form it will diminish refugee protection. Large-scale reception centres are planned and the legislation includes a provision for housing asylum seekers offshore while their claims are considered.

Continue reading on the Guardian.

Article by Diane Taylor, 6 December 2021.

Manus Island detention centre to close by year’s end, inquest told

 

The Manus Island immigration detention centre is slated for closure by the end of 2017, a senior Australian government bureaucrat has told a court.

An article by Ben Doherty, The Guardian.

“The Papua New Guinean high court [sic] has indicated that they want it closed, and certainly the indications from the government are that they are looking that the facility should be closed by the end of this year,” Paul Douglas, assistant secretary with the Australian Department of Immigration and Border Protection, said in evidence before the Queensland coroner.

Douglas’s comments coincide with efforts inside the Australian-run detention centre to escalate forcible deportations from the island, as well as ongoing interviews with US officials about resettlement in America.

Douglas, the former chief medical officer for the department and now assistant secretary of the health policy and performance branch, was appearing at the coronial inquest into the 2014 death of Hamid Kehazaei, who died from a treatable infection contracted at the Manus centre.

In the context of Kehazaei’s death and efforts to prevent more fatalities in offshore detention, Douglas was asked what the Australian and PNG governments’ plans were for the Manus facility. Douglas said “nothing is firm” about the proposed closure, but that it was intended for the camp to be shuttered by the end of the year.

Read the full article at the Guardian: https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2017/feb/15/manus-island-detention-centre-to-close-by-years-end-inquest-told

 

Defunct Detention Centre Tours

During the unenlightened years (2001 – 2016) Manus Island was used as a “Detention Centre” (2001 – 2004) and “Regional Processing Centre” (2012-2016) for innocent asylum seekers. Several famous prisoners were detained here, including Aladdin Sisalem, who was kept as a lone inmate from July 2003 until he was finally granted asylum in Australia in June 2004, and Reza Barati, killed in a riot in February 2014. Take a tour, led by former guards of the Centre, and discover the horrifying conditions and dehumanizing propaganda that is now, thankfully, a thing of the past.

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Climb Mount Dremsel

Mt. Dremsel Manus Island’s tallest peak, rising to 718 metres (2,356 ft) above sea level. Mount Dremsel Trekking is day tour based in Lorengau, the capital of Manus Province. We start early to see the beautiful and amazing sunrise in Manus. Mount Dremsel was a volcano that probably erupted 8 – 10 million years ago. It is safe to climb. Medium skill required.

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Floating Hotel

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Former staff quarters for the Regional Processing Facility, this floating hotel comes complete with a large bar, restaurant, gymnasium and a rooftop terrace to soak up the idyllic tropical island views, with accommodation for up to 635 visitors in private rooms, each with its own ensuite facilities. Dining facilities, recreational facilities and laundry facilities included in the comprehensive price. Just a short stroll to Manus Island’s Number 1 tourist attraction, the Defunct Detention Centre.

 

10-Person tents

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In the heart of the island, an easy walk to ocean, rugged jungle, tropical rain forest, trade stores and markets. 570km from mainland Papua New Guinea.

These are pre-loved army supply 10-person tents equipped with single beds including memory foam mattress and mosquito nets. Just outside the fence: Huge sky, stars, tropical wildlife.