More Top Stories

Court
Economy
Economy
Economy
Economy
Education

Manus on verge of riot

Thursday 15 January 2015 | Published in Regional

Share

‘We asylum seekers fear to be resettled in Papua New Guinea. Please hand us over to the UN. Two years in detention. Enough is enough.’

LORENGAU – The Manus Island detention centre in Papua New Guinea is on the verge of another riot, with more than 500 men now joining a mass hunger strike and at least two men having stitched their lips together, The Guardian newspaper reports.

Water pumps at the centre have broken, meaning there is no access to running water for showers.

The 1000 men in detention and staff have been given bottles of water to shower with, and staff have been told they cannot shower, flush toilets, or wash their clothes.

They have been told it could be weeks until the running water supply is restored.

Already, the shower block in Mike Compound is littered with discarded bottles.

There has been a shortage of soap for weeks, the Guardian reports.

The hunger strike which began in Mike compound on Tuesday has now spread to other compounds.

Oscar compound detainees have reportedly voted to hunger strike, and men in Foxtrot compound say they will also join.

Men from Mike are refusing to return to their dorms, camping out in a central area in the compound, and refusing orders to disperse.

The immigration department in Canberra told AAP no detainees are “involved in food and fluid refusal”.

But department staff on the island have told Guardian Australia this is not true, and that the hunger strike is now widespread.

Some detainees have sewn their lips shut with thread as part of a hunger strike.

Photographs show at least two men have stitched their lips together and are refusing all food and water.

The first man to sew his lips, a 40-year-old Egyptian Christian, told fellow detainees before he started his protest: “If I don’t go from this place in four days I will kill myself. I don’t care about my life.”

He has been on Manus since 12 December 2013, but he has been in Australia’s immigration detention system almost 450 days.

A fellow detainee in Mike compound said: “Today, at 8.30am on Manus Island in my compound, medical staff came to check one of the boys who sew his lips from yesterday. They come to check his health.

“This man rejects them to check him. He says ‘I’m want to die. I just have one option, I just want to see my daughter and my sister. They live in Australia for the last eight years. I miss them, I have to see them’.”

The man’s sister, an Australian citizen, spoke to Guardian Australia from Sydney saying she was “so worried he will die, he will be killed by the Australian government”.

Another man with stitched lips is a 27-year-old Iranian asylum seeker who has been on Manus for 17 months, since August 8, 2013.

Detainees are protesting because they fear being forced out of detention into the community, where they believe they will be attacked by the local population which resents the men being forcibly resettled in their community.

One local security guard in Oscar compound told detainees the local people would not allow any of them to live in their community.

Staff have reported local men standing at the fence of the detention centre making throat-slashing gestures.

The detainees are asking that their claims for refugee status are properly and quickly assessed. Some have been in detention for more than 18 months.

The detainees have asked that instead of being resettled in Papua New Guinea – where they believe they will be attacked, and possibly killed – that they are handed over to the care of the United Nations high commissioner as refugees.

A protest sign put up at the detention centre reads: “We asylum seekers fear to be resettled in PNG. Please hand us over to the UN. Two years in detention. Enough is enough”.

One detainee told Guardian Australia through an intermediary: “Why do we have to suffer like this? What we did?”

Distraught and in tears, he appears to address the Australian people: “Let your government to kill us. Let your government to kill us. We are human beings. We are not bad people. Please help us. Please help us. We begging you to help us.”

Adding to the distress of detainees, local security guards have told Guardian Australia that they have not been paid for several weeks and several have gone on strike, often leaving detainees without any guards.

One PNG guard said his pay, and that of his colleagues, was stopped without explanation three weeks ago, and that dozens of security guards have refused to report for shifts in protest.

Staff on the compound have been told the water supply is not working.

A sign posted by the private firm with the contract to run the detention centre, Transfield Services, says some of the water equipment has “broken down”.

“For transferees, this means you cannot have showers. For staff, this means no showers and no washing of clothes. These restrictions are effective immediately.”

It is unknown when water will be restored to the detention centre, but Guardian Australia has been told it could be three weeks.

Immigration department staff say the situation on Manus is “chaotic” and “deteriorating”.

In February last year, three days of rioting resulted in more than 70 men being seriously injured, and one, 23-year-old Reza Barati, being killed.

He was allegedly attacked by local men who worked in the detention centre, and reportedly died after he was beaten with a wooden pole and had a rock dropped on his head.

A parliamentary inquiry last month found the violence which resulted in Barati’s death was “eminently foreseeable” and that the Australian government was responsible for protecting the detainees under its control.

The office of the immigration minister, Peter Dutton, has not returned calls from the Guardian. The department of immigration and border protection has been contacted for comment.