Yahoo – AFP,
Martin Parry, 12 Oct 2015
Australian doctors on Monday ramped up pressure on the government over its hardline policy on asylum-seekers, saying children they treat from immigration centres should not be returned to detention where conditions could harm them.
A woman
holds a banner at a rally in support of refugees and asylum seekers,
in Sydney,
on October 11, 2015 (AFP Photo/Peter Parks)
|
Australian doctors on Monday ramped up pressure on the government over its hardline policy on asylum-seekers, saying children they treat from immigration centres should not be returned to detention where conditions could harm them.
Thousands
of Australians rallied over the weekend urging Pacific island detention camps
be shut, and medical professionals at the Royal Children's Hospital in
Melbourne are reportedly refusing to discharge asylum-seeker patients if they
are to be locked up again.
The stance
was backed by the Australian Medical Association (AMA) and the Royal
Australasian College of Physicians (RACP).
Ethnic
Syrians attend a rally in support of
refugees and asylum seekers, in Sydney, on
October 11, 2015 (AFP Photo/Peter Parks)
|
"Doctors
are put in a very difficult position," he told national radio.
"If we
had a child that comes into our hospital that we feared if sending them back to
an environment which we felt was going to be harmful, where they were at risk
of abuse, we would be negligent if we sent them back to that environment.
"And
that is what the doctors at the Royal Children's Hospital are saying. We cannot
send children back to an environment where they're going to be harmed."
RACP
president Nick Talley added in a statement that "time and again, the
Australian public has seen inquiries and heard excuses for the wrongs committed
against children inside these detention centres".
"The
health and well-being of children should never be open to compromise. No child
should be held in detention," he said.
All
asylum-seekers coming by boat to Australia are now sent to camps in Papua New
Guinea and Nauru and ultimately denied resettlement in Australia even if they
are found to be genuine refugees.
Although
the tough policy, which also includes turning back boats, has stopped frequent
drownings, human rights organisations have slammed the prolonged detention,
particularly of children, as a breach of Australia's legal obligations.
Canberra
has also been accused of drawing a veil of secrecy over its treatment of
asylum-seekers with new laws introduced this year criminalising the disclosure
of information about boatpeople in its care, including by doctors.
Harsh
policy
Owler
estimated some 200 children were being held, about half in Australia and the
rest offshore. Government figures recently said 86 children were on Nauru.
Distressed
about the welfare of dozens of patients brought to the Royal Children's
Hospital in Melbourne while in immigration detention, staff on Sunday penned an
emotive opinion piece for the Herald Sun newspaper.
A
demonstrator (L) representing the NSW Nurses and Midwives' Association,
seen at
a rally in support of refugees and asylum seekers, in Sydney, on October 11,
2015 (AFP Photo/Peter Parks)
|
"As
health staff at a leading children's hospital, our duty is to support child
health. We cannot accept or condone harm to children. Detention causes harm and
it must end," it said.
"We
call for moral leadership on this issue to find a solution, quickly -- to use
alternatives to detention and to stop the harm."
The numbers
of children in immigration detention peaked at 1,992 in mid-2013 under the
former Labor administration, but they have been significantly reduced since the
conservative government was elected in September that year.
Since ousting
Tony Abbott for the leadership of the Liberal Party and the government last
month, Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull has admitted to concerns about the
Pacific camps. But he has given no indication of immediate policy changes.
"Nobody
wants to have children in detention ... we have been working very hard to
reduce those numbers," he told parliament Monday, while advocating a tough
asylum-seeker policy as a necessary deterrent.
"We
recognise that our border protection policy is tough, we recognise many would
see it as harsh. But it has been proven to be the only way to stop those deaths
at sea and to ensure that our sovereignty and our borders are safe."
Australia doctors demand children be freed from #immigration detention http://t.co/oSHkZyvn5V pic.twitter.com/s9yLBKHA2Z
— Agence France-Presse (@AFP) 12 oktober 2015
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