Australia PM Turnbull challenged over asylum policy

  02 October 2015    Read: 1045
Australia PM Turnbull challenged over asylum policy
Australia`s new PM Malcolm Turnbull is facing fresh calls to close down offshore migrant detention centers.
Australia of the Year and domestic violence campaigner Rosie Batty said on Thursday the camps are unsafe.

Nearly 450 staff at Mr Turnbull`s former university have also expressed concern about claims of torture by government employees and contractors.

Australia intercepts all irregular boat migrants and holds them in camps in Nauru and Papua New Guinea.

Mr Turnbull has defended the rules, a central policy of former Prime Minister Tony Abbott, by saying they are tough but save lives.

`Repugnant acts`

In a letter to Mr Turnbull, Ms Batty said those detained in offshore centres needed care, instead of punishment.

NAURU: The barren and bankrupt island state of the Republic of Nauru awaits the arrival of 521 mainly Afghan refugees, 11 September 2001 which have been refused entry into Australia.

"The centres are, by their very design, unsafe and dangerous places. These centres cannot be patched up," she said.

The academics, meanwhile, said there was "overwhelming" evidence that "repugnant acts" including torture and abuse had been carried out the camps.

This week, the Australian Broadcasting Corp aired allegations made by a Somali woman who said she was raped by two men on Nauru - and that it took police on the Pacific island four hours to respond.

Australia and asylum

Many asylum seekers - mainly from Afghanistan, Sri Lanka, Iraq and Iran - travelled to Australia`s Christmas Island by boat from Indonesia.

The number of boats rose sharply in 2012 and early 2013. Scores of people died making the journey.

To stop the influx, the government adopted hard-line measures intended as a deterrent.

Everyone who arrives by boat is now detained and processed in Nauru and Papua New Guinea. Those found to be refugees will be resettled in PNG, Nauru or Cambodia.

Is Australia`s Cambodia solution `an expensive joke`?

Australia`s controversial asylum policy

Mr Turnbull said the rape claims raised in the report were "very alarming", but defended the government`s stance on border security.

"The one thing we know is these policies, tough though they are, harsh though they are in many respects, actually do work, they save lives," Mr Turnbull said.

"We`re taking a number of steps to work closely with the Nauru government to ensure the safety and the security of all the refugees living in that community."

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