Migrants resume riot at Australian camp
19.Dec.01, first published by BBCnews: read the original article here.
Rioters were dispersed with water cannon and tear gas
Asylum seekers have carried out a second night of violent protests at a
remote detention centre in the South Australian outback.
The authorities at the Woomera detention camp used water cannon and tear gas
to calm the situation, after detainees set fire to five buildings.
It's absolutely the wrong way of going about getting anybenefits they seek
from the Australian community
Daryl WilliamsActing Immigration Minister Hundreds were reported to have
pelted staff with stones and some of them attacked a perimeter fence until
extra security arrived.
The latest incidents come after 15 buildings were set alight and several
were destroyed the night before.
On both occasions the asylum seekers were reported to be chanting demands
for visas.
Refugee campaigners say there is rising discontent in the immigration camps,
where asylum seekers can be held for as long as five years before their
applications are processed.
The unrest is the worst of a series of incidents at the camp in the past 18
months.
Attorney-General Daryl Williams, speaking as acting immigration minister,
warned the Woomera protesters that the campaign would not intimidate the
government into issuing refugee visas.
"The message I think we need to get to the detainees who are conducting this
criminal campaign is that vandalism is not going to get you a visa," he said
on Wednesday.
"It's absolutely the wrong way of going about getting any benefits they seek
from the Australian community."
Government officials said on Tuesday the damage would run into hundreds of
thousands of dollars.
The fires then destroyed three, new purpose-built accommodation facilities,
a dining hall and a computing facility.
On Wednesday morning, the situation at Woomera was described as calm with no
injuries reported, but the centre remained on a high alert with additional
security.
'No hope'
"In this kind of environment people lose all sense of hope, particularly as
they've no notion how long they will be there," said the head of the Refugee
Council of Australia, Margaret Piper.
To hold them for any length of time is against international law
Amnesty International
Human rights group Amnesty International has called for an inquiry into
Australia's policy of mandatory detention of asylum seekers, which includes
women and children.
"We believe that there should be some form of detention to determine
people's identities, health or security risk, but to hold them for any
length of time is against international law," Amnesty Australia spokesman
Stuart Webb told Australian radio.
Woomera is one of six detention centres set up in isolated areas to detain
illegal immigrants while their claims for asylum are investigated.
Under the government's hardline policies aimed at deterring boat people,
recent arrivals have instead been shipped off to the Pacific island nations
of Nauru and Papua New Guinea to have their claims assessed.