Local Bishops concerned about
Manus Island refugees
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| Bishops of the Federation of Catholic Bishops' Conferences of Oceania gathered in Papua New Guinea, June 2018. |
Five hundred refugees stranded on Manus Island still await
an end to the seemingly unending period of mandatory detention.
By Sr Bernadette Mary Reis, fsp
Five hundred refugees remain stranded on Manus Island off of
Papua New Guinea’s northern coast. Their plight remains in the hands of the
Australian government.
Refugees in unending holding pattern
These refugees find themselves in a detention centre due to
an Australian policy that requires mandatory detention for those seeking asylum
without a valid entry visa. According to a statement released by the
Society for the Propagation of the Faith (Agenzia Fides) on Thursday, many of
them celebrated their sixth Christmas in detention.
Cause of great suffering
The Communication Secretary for the Bishops of Papua New
Guinea, Salesian Father Ambrose Pereira, wrote in the statement that the
refugees’ situation causes the Bishops “great suffering”. He said that the
refugees who had gone to Port Moresby for medical treatment were “brought back
to Manus Island” during the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation summit which took
place from 17-18 November 2018 in Port Moresby. In the detention center, the
refugees face “stress, trauma, overcrowding and malnutrition”, Fr Pereira
stated.
Survival
Christmas, Fr Pereira wrote in the statement, “was just
another night of detention on Manus Island”. He reported that there were at
least three suicide attempts. “Most of them survive thanks to medicines, mostly
anti-depressants, anti-anxiety, antipsychotics”, he wrote. The refugees are
taking these drugs without the necessary prescriptions or medical follow-up.
Freedom is the solution
Rightly, Fr Pereira declared that no human being should be
treated the way these refugees are being treated. “It is about abuse and
neglect”, he declared. Amid the nightmare he said the “refugees are waiting for
the day they are released, and we hope that 2019 will bring good news for
them".
Australian Bishops
The Australian Bishops released a statement in December,
directed to Australia’s “elected representatives”. In it, they urge them to
resolve “the offshore detention crisis” as soon as they return from the
Christmas break. “We cannot afford to have the plight of these
people made even worse by making their futures the subject of bitter electoral
disputation in the year ahead”, the Australian Bishops said in that statement.

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