Nauru has
said that it will allow refugees held at a controversial Australian detention
center to move freely around the tiny island. But the move has not allayed
human rights concerns about conditions in the camp.
The Nauru
government said on Monday that asylum seekers at the center would no longer be
kept locked up, but given complete freedom of movement on the Pacific island,
which has an area of some 21 square kilometers (8.1 square miles).
It also
said it would ensure that all asylum applications by the 600 refugees still
living on the island would be processed by the end of this week.
"The
start of detention-free processing is a landmark day for Nauru and represents
an even more compassionate program, which was always the intention of our
government," said Justice Minister David Adeang.
Widespread
condemnation
The United
Nations and human rights groups have strongly criticized the harsh conditions
at the camp on Nauru, which was set up as part of Canberra's hardline asylum-seeker policies, under which people trying to reach Australia by boat
must have their asylum claims processed outside Australian territory.
Another
camp has been established on Manus Island in Papua New Guinea.
An
independent UN investigator last month postponed a fact'finding trip toAustralia, complaining that the government was not cooperating in helping him
gain access to the offshore camps.
'Fundamental
problems remain'
Adeang said
Australia, which welcomed Nauru's announcement, was providing more police
support and health care for the asylum seekers to aid the transition to an
"open center."
Refugee
advocates, who have alleged that a number of human rights violations, including
rape and child abuse, have occurred at the offshore camps, say the change
coincides with a court case this week in Australia in which the legality of Canberra's refugee policy is being challenged.
Rights groups say children in the camps are at especial risk |
"A
transition to an open center [is] and important and hard-won improvement, but
letting people go for a walk does not resolve the fundamental proglems caused
by indefintely warehousing them on a tiny remote island," Daniel Webb
said, calling the camp environment "clearly unsafe for women and children."
Compassionate
approach?
Australia
has defended its harsh policy, which has also seen boats carrying refugees
turned back to Indonesia or other countries of departure, as being necessary to
stop people drowning at sea. No one processed at the Nauru or Papua New Guinea
camps is eligible to move to Australia, even if their asylum claims are
adjudged to be valid.
New
Australian Prime Minster Malcolm Turnbull last month voiced concern about
conditions in the camps, but did not indicate any major change in policy.
tj/msh (AFP, Reuters)
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