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Australia drops asylum-seeker secrecy laws

Australia drops asylum-seeker secrecy laws
A member of a human rights group holds a placard as they call for an independent inquiry outside the Commonwealth Government offices in Sydney on August 9, 2017, after another refugee was found dead at a detention camp in Papua New Guinea in a tragedy they said was preventable. Australia's Human Rights Law Centre said Hamed Shamshiripou was the fifth held on Manus Island to die since Canberra's offshore regime began in July 2013. (AFP)
Updated 14 August 2017

Australia drops asylum-seeker secrecy laws

Australia drops asylum-seeker secrecy laws

SYDNEY: Australia is scrapping secrecy laws designed to stop whistleblowers from speaking out about alleged abuse at offshore asylum-seeker detention camps, in a move which campaigners Monday hailed as a victory for free speech.
Asylum-seekers who try to reach Australia by boat are either turned back or sent to remote camps in Nauru and on Papua New Guinea’s Manus Island.
Refugee advocates and medical professionals have long criticized conditions in the camps, where some detainees have been held for years.
The secrecy provisions were introduced in 2015, making it a jailable offense for immigration department workers to speak out about conditions in the centers.
But Immigration Minister Peter Dutton last week moved an amendment to the law to restrict the definition of unauthorized disclosures to information relating to the national or public interest.
He told parliament last week the 2015 changes had “not kept pace with the developments in the modern border environment.”
“The definition of the information to be protected has been refined to include only certain kinds of information” such as national security and defense, Dutton added.
The previous provisions were set to be challenged in the High Court by rights group Doctors for Refugees, which welcomed the government’s U-turn.
“This is a stunning victory for anyone in Australia who believes people who are concerned about abuse or neglect should be allowed to speak out,” Barri Phatarfod from Doctors for Refugees said in a statement Monday.
A PNG court ruled last year that holding people on Manus was unconstitutional, and Canberra is set to shut the camp later this year.
The detainees will be moved to third countries such as the US and Cambodia or be resettled in PNG.
Canberra has been criticized for its asylum-seeker policies but defends its tough stance as necessary to stamp out people-smuggling and stop asylum-seekers dying at sea in rickety boats.