Asylum Seekers Continue Stand-off in WA
Tuesday, 23 April 2002, 9:16 pm
Article: Selwyn Manning - Scoop Auckland
Asylum Seekers Continue Stand-off in WA
First
published on Spectator.co.nz…
By Selwyn Manning.
A standoff between
security at a detention centre in northwestern Australia is
now in its fifth day. Australian immigration officials say
28 guards have been injured so far in clashes with the
asylum seekers at the Curtin detention centre in Western
Australia. Riots broke out on Friday to protest the
Australian government's rejection of scores of asylum
applications.
Hundreds of detainees armed with knives
and sharpened broom sticks took over parts of the facility
late Sunday protesting against living conditions and threats
of deportation. A fire was also lit at the Curtin centre.
Australian Immigration Minister Philip Ruddock has
come under increasing pressure while abroad in the United
Kingdom to rethink Australia’s stance toward those seeking
asylum and refugee status. Ruddock was set up while
attending a legal conference in the UK. Lawyers attending
the conference fired a series of accusations at Ruddock
before he vacated the scene.
Australia has continued
a “tough stance” against those seeking asylum and refugee
status, a policy that was highlighted with the plight of the
people aboard the Tampa ship. Australia refused to allow the
people to disembark onto Australian soil. New Zealand and
Nauru eventually averted a human catastrophe after providing
sanctuary to the asylum seekers.
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Back in Australia,
footage of a bloody asylum seeker beating his head against a
wall to protest living conditions at the Curtin centre was
shown today on Australian television. The footage was
historical, from June of last year, and recorded by a
private corporation that runs Australia's detention centres.
Australian human rights groups say the graphic
footage serves as an indictment of the government's policy
of detaining all illegal immigrants while reviewing their
asylum applications. Riots and protests have erupted at
several Australian detention centres over the past two
years. Immigration officials claim calm has returned to
another detention centres at Port Hedland, also in Western
Australia, after a disturbance Monday. There, a number of
detainees rioted at the centres, setting small fires and
damaging a fence.
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2002.
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