Quote:Processing was ONLY allowed to resume on a change of government
At such time, 98% of those in permanent incarceration were found to have been genuine refugees all along
Quote:No, not true at all.
Australia must not lose its way on the rights of refugees
The Age
EDITORIAL
September 14, 2007
WHAT kind of country has Australia become?
This is the question Australians again have to ask themselves in the wake of the Federal Government's disturbing decision to deny 72 Sri Lankans, who have been found to be
genuine refugees, the right to settle in Australia.
What the Government has granted this group of Tamil men is
the right to languish on Nauru Island until the Government finds another country willing to assume Australia's international and moral obligations to accept and resettle them.
The men are in for a long and possibly fruitless wait.
According to the the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, only about 4 per cent of asylum seekers processed on Nauru and Manus Island have been accepted by other countries.
This sad, paltry figure is testament to the fact that other countries are reluctant to accept people they consider, with justification, to be
Australia's responsibility.
And, if past experience is any indicator, these refugees also face
a traumatic life in detention, a life characterised by isolation and mental illness. Cont ... (reprint)
http://www.safecom.org.au/srilankans-nauru2.htm