Those who've come across the seas: Detention of unauthorised arrivals (1998)
Browse a 1998 report on mandatory detention of unauthorised arrivals, analysing policy, centre conditions and complaints by people in immigration detention.
Summary
HREOC’s report, tabled in federal Parliament on 12 May 1998, deals with the policy of mandatory detention of most unauthorised arrivals and the conditions of detention for those detained. The report had its origins in the many complaints received by HREOC from, or on behalf of, people in immigration detention centres.
Those who've come across the
seas: Detention of unauthorised arrivals (1998)
HREOC's report, tabled in federal Parliament on 12 May 1998, deals with
the policy of mandatory detention of most unauthorised arrivals and the
conditions of detention for those detained. The report had its origins in the
many complaints received by HREOC from, or on behalf of, people in immigration
detention centres.
HREOC found that the policy of mandatory detention violates international
law, which permits detention only where necessary to verify the detainee's
identity, to determine the elements on which the claim to refugee status or
asylum is based, to deal with people who have destroyed their documents to
mislead the authorities or to protect national security or public order. HREOC
recommended that those whose detention cannot be justified for one of these
reasons should be released, subject to reporting requirements, until their
status is determined. It proposed a range of community release options.
The
report also found that the conditions, treatment and services for detainees vary
considerably among the three detention centres which were the focus of the
inquiry: Port Hedland, Perth and Villawood. It made detailed recommendations to
address human rights breaches that were identified and significantly enhanced
external oversight and monitoring of the conditions and treatment of
detainees.
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