Save the Children urges Government to help children on Nauru
16 August 2016
Save the Children urges NZ Government to help children on Nauru
Save the Children is
calling on the New Zealand government to redouble its
efforts to offer refuge to children and families living in
detention centres in Nauru, following fresh evidence of
abuse.
The Australian Government is coming under increasing fire over its policy of detaining refugee families in the small Pacific atoll following the leak of approximately 2000 reports written by aid workers, doctors, and security staff, which outline a history of child abuse, sexual abuse and self-harm.
Save the Children
Australia provided education, welfare, child protection and
recreational services in the Nauru detention centre from
August 2013 to October 2015, and have confirmed these
reports are consistent with their observations on the
ground.
Save the Children’s New Zealand CEO Heather
Hayden says in light of the overwhelming reports of abuse,
along with the growing sense of hopelessness among refugees
and asylum seekers resulting from years of living in limbo,
our government needs to insist that children and their
families be removed immediately from Nauru.
“Children are extremely vulnerable and must not remain
in facilities which clearly pose a risk to their well-being.
This shouldn’t be about politics or protecting Australian
immigration policies, but about doing what is best for
children, first and foremost”, says Hayden.
A
two-year-old offer from New Zealand to resettle 150 refugees
a year from Australia’s offshore detention centres remains
untouched by a reluctant Australian government, despite a
public plea from people on Nauru earlier this year.
The
New Zealand government has said its offer remains part of
its official immigration policy and open to the Australian
government.
“Our government needs to reengage the
Governments of Australia and Nauru and do what is necessary
to secure the release of vulnerable children”, says
Hayden.
Hayden says if Australia continues to be a
barrier towards a positive outcome for refugees and asylum
seekers languishing in effective indefinite detention, then
the New Zealand government should instead engage directly
with the Government of Nauru on resettlement.
“Australia is proving itself to be a disingenuous player by not giving refugees on Nauru the chance to move on with their lives. New Zealand should cut out the middleman and work directly with the Government of Nauru to begin resettling these people as part of the government’s standing offer,” says Hayden.
END