ON
← Back to feed
SloveniaMedicine2 days ago

Australia to pay multimillion-dollar compensation to former asylum seekers

An Australian court has ruled that the country is responsible for compensating former asylum seekers who were detained at the Woomera detention center between 1999 and 2003. The compensation amounts to approximately 28 million Australian dollars (around 17 million euros). The Woomera facility, opened in 1999 in southern Australia, held nearly 1,500 people in its first six months of operation, mostly from Iraq and Afghanistan, with a third being children. Former detainees protested multiple times during their detention, attempted mass escapes, and some even self-starved during hunger strikes,据法

Sodišče v Avstraliji je prejšnji teden prepoznalo odgovornost države za poplačilo odškodnine prosilcem za azil, ki so jih v obdobju 1999 in 2003 pridržali v centru za priseljence Woomera. Avstralija je pri tem privolila v poplačilo odškodnine več deset nekdanjim prosilcem za azil v višini 28 milijonov avstralskih dolarjev (približno 17 milijonov evrov).

Vhod v nekdanji Center za sprejem in obdelavo priseljencev (IRPC) v Woomeri. FOTO: Schutz/Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA 3.0

Center za pridržanje Woomera so odprli leta 1999 v puščavi na jugu Avstralije. V prvih šestih mescih delovanja je bilo v njem zaprtih skoraj 1500 ljudi, večinoma iz Iraka in Afganistana, tretjina zapornikov je bilo otrok. Pridržani prosilci za azil so zaradi razmer v centru do njegovega zaprtja leta 2003 večkrat protestirali, poskušali izvesti množične pobege, nekateri pa so si ob gladovni stavki celo zašili ustnice, poroča francoska tiskovna agencija AFP .

Skupina 38 nekdanjih prosilcev za azil, ki so med pridržanjem v centrih Woomera in Baxter utrpeli resno škodo, je zoper državo pred časom vložilo skupno tožbo. Avstralsko vrhovno sodišče je nato prejšnji teden odločilo, da mora vlada poravnati odškodninske zahtevke tožbe.

V prvih šestih mescih delovanja je bilo v Woomeri zaprtih skoraj 1500 ljudi, večinoma iz Iraka in Afganistana, tretjina zapornikov je bilo otrok. Fotografija je simboilična. FOTO: Reuters

Avstralska vlada je danes sporočila, da se strinja s poravnavo odškodnine v višini 28 milijonov avstralskih dolarjev. »Zadeva je bila rešena v skladu s pravnimi načeli in prakso,« je ob tem dejal tiskovni predstavnik avstralskega notranjega ministrstva.

»Danes je pomemben dan, a hkrati tudi dan, ki ga zaznamuje žalost. Za mnoge člane skupine je Avstralija zdaj dom. Tukaj so si ustvarili življenje, družine in skupnosti, hkrati pa še naprej živijo s posledicami izjemno težkega obdobja v njihovem življenju,« je ob novici o doseženi odškodninski poravnavi izjavil odvetnik Nicholas Kitchin .

Read the full article at Delo
Source document: Australian Supreme Court ruling

1 reports

DeloIndependent🔒Center2 days ago
Australia to pay multimillion-dollar compensation to former asylum seekers

An Australian court has ruled that the country is responsible for compensating former asylum seekers who were detained at the Woomera detention center between 1999 and 2003. The compensation amounts to approximately 28 million Australian dollars (around 17 million euros). The Woomera facility, opened in 1999 in southern Australia, held nearly 1,500 people in its first six months of operation, mostly from Iraq and Afghanistan, with a third being children. Former detainees protested multiple times during their detention, attempted mass escapes, and some even self-starved during hunger strikes,据法

Bias read (Center): The article reports on a legal ruling regarding compensation for former asylum seekers without taking a stance on the issue. It presents facts about the court decision, the conditions in the detention center, and the actions taken by the detainees, without showing clear bias toward either side.

Official sources cited

  • court Australian Supreme Court ruling
  • press release AFP report on protests and hunger strikes

Go to the primary sources (2)

The official sources this coverage is built on. Read them directly to bypass framing.

  • courtAustralian Supreme Court ruling
  • press_releaseAFP report on protests and hunger strikes