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| Pacific Media Watch | ||||||
| AUSTRALIA: 'Pacific solution' ends as last asylum seekers leave Nauru |
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Title -- 5297 AUSTRALIA: 'Pacific solution' ends as last asylum seekers leave Nauru Date -- 8 February 2008 Byline -- None Origin -- Pacific Media Watch Source -- Radio NZ International 8/2/08 Copyright - RNZI Status -- Unabridged Post a comment on PMW's Right of Reply: PMW feedback pmc@aut.ac.nz AUSTRALIA'S PACIFIC SOLUTION ENDS AS LAST ASYLUM SEEKERS LEAVE NAURU www.ifj-asia.org WELLINGTON (RNZI Online/Pacific Media Watch): Australias controversial 'Pacific solution' to deal with asylum seekers has effectively ended with todays departure for Brisbane of 21 Sri Lankan refugees from Nauru. The 21 asylum seekers, held in Nauru since March last year, were the last occupants of the detention centre built by Australia. The controversial Howard government policy of keeping asylum seekers in foreign camps was designed to stop them from being processed in Australia, but has been scrapped by the new Labor government. Mark Getchell from the International Organisation for Migration, which ran the Nauru facility, said there were now no asylum seekers left in Nauru. The United Nations High Commission for Refugees welcomed the end of the policy. Its regional representative, Richard Towle, says many bona fide refugees caught by the policy spent long periods of isolation, mental hardship and uncertainty - and prolonged separation from their families. More than US$200 million had been spent by Canberra running the camp for the past six and a half years. The total number of people held at the Nauru facility was 1322, of whom 543 were found to be genuine refugees. |
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PACIFIC MEDIA WATCH is an independent, non-profit, non-government organisation comprising journalists, lawyers, editors and other media workers, dedicated to examining issues of ethics, accountability, censorship, media freedom and media ownership in the Pacific region. It is now published by the Pacific Media Centre at New Zealand's AUT University. Launched in October 1996, it has links with the Journalism Programme at the University of the South Pacific, Journalism Studies at the University of PNG (UPNG) and the Australian Centre for Independent Journalism (ACIJ), Auckland University of Technology in New Zealand. The website is hosted by the Association of Progressive Communications (APC). © 1996-2008 Copyright - All rights reserved. Items are provided solely for review purposes as a non-profit educational service. Copyright remains the property of the original producers as indicated. Recipients should seek permission from the copyright owner for any publishing. Copyright owners not wishing their materials to be posted by PMW please contact us. The views expressed in material listed by PMW are not necessarily the views of PMW or its members. Recipients should rely on their own inquiries before making decisions based on material listed in PMW. For further information and joining the Pacific Media Watch listserve,
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