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Protestors target Australian migrant camp operator’s meeting

The company running Australia’s offshore immigration detention camps rejected on Wednesday suggestions that its staff were involved in human rights abuses on isolated Pacific islands as the United Nations escalated criticism of the facilities.

Updated on: Oct 28, 2015 01:26 PM IST
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The company running Australia’s offshore immigration detention camps rejected on Wednesday suggestions that its staff were involved in human rights abuses on isolated Pacific islands as the United Nations escalated criticism of the facilities.

Police push pro-refugee protesters outside the Transfield Services annual general meeting in Sydney on October 28, 2015. Transfield runs Australia's controversial offshore detention centres in the Pacific Ocean. (AFP Photo)
Police push pro-refugee protesters outside the Transfield Services annual general meeting in Sydney on October 28, 2015. Transfield runs Australia's controversial offshore detention centres in the Pacific Ocean. (AFP Photo)

About 100 protesters disrupted the annual general meeting of Transfield Services Ltd as company chairwoman Diane Smith-Gander said they only provided support services for the camps that were set up and paid for by Australia’s government.

“We are not responsible for those policies and we play no part in their development,” Smith-Gander said.

Immigration is a sensitive issue in Australia and two years ago the government re-introduced a policy of intercepting refugee boats and processing applications for visas on Nauru and Papua New Guinea.

The programme has come under renewed criticism since a Somali woman said she was raped in custody on Nauru.

A pro-refugee protester (C) holds up a placard outside the Transfield Services annual general meeting in Sydney on October 28, 2015.

Chief executive Grame Hunt said the company had “zero tolerance” of mistreatment and rejected any suggestion Transfield staff were involved in abuse.

Among several rights activists to speak at the meeting, Mohammad Ali Baqiri from Afghanistan told how, as a boy held on Nauru for three years from 2001, he regularly saw prisoners attempt suicide.

“Detention centres are worse than prison,” Baquiri said.

“At least in prison you know you’ve committed a crime ... it’s ethically and morally wrong to profit from abuse.”

Other activists suggested Transfield’s share price was being hurt by the programme.

“Things are not going well for your company and they’re going to get worse,” a woman told the meeting before security staff removed her.

A year ago, Transfield rejected a takeover approach from Spain’s Ferrovial SA at A$2 per share. The stock is now barely half that, having seen several large shareholders exit citing rights concerns.

The United Nations has said an increase in rapes was being reported and it was concerned about a lack of response from Nauru police.

“Impunity for such serious crimes increases the risk they will be repeated,” UN human rights spokesman Rupert Colville said on Tuesday.

Australia’s policy has attracted interest from conservatives in Europe where large numbers of people are seeking refuge from war in the Middle East.

Former prime minister Tony Abbott on Tuesday urged Europe to close its borders, telling British conservatives an instinct to help “is leading much of Europe into catastrophic error”.

 
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Get the latest headlines from US news and global updates from Pakistan, Nepal, UK, Bangladesh, Russia and US Iran war Live, get all the latest headlines in one place on Hindustan Times.
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