Papua New Guinea/Australia Journalists Prevented From Reporting About Refugee Camp In Papua New Guinea
In a letter addressed to Immigration minister Philipp Ruddock, Reporters sans frontières (Reporters Without Borders-RSF)
expressed its deep concern about the hindrances met by journalists who wished to report about the asylum seeker
detention centres set by the Australian government in Papua New Guinea and on the island of Nauru.
"The Australian authorities must cancel the instructions given to Papuan authorities to prevent journalists access to
the Manus camp", Robert Ménard declared, general secretary of the organisation.
"Once again, the Australian government makes use of authoritarian practices to hide the disastrous situation of human
rights in these centres", M. Ménard added. The organisation for the defence of press freedom asked the minister to apply
to Papua New Guinea and Nauru authorities so that visas be granted to journalists willing to report on centres for
asylum seekers.
According to information obtained by RSF, the journalists applying for visas to Papua New Guinea had their requests
systematically rejected without an explanation.
Greg Roberts, journalist for the daily Sydney Morning Herald, had been the first and only journalist to have had access
to the refugee centre of Manus, an island of the Papua New Guinea archipelago, thanks to a tourist visa and introducing
himself as a "birdwatcher".
No sooner had he entered the naval base where asylum seekers mostly of Iraqi nationality were detained that he was
expelled by the personnel of a private security company controlled by former members of the Rhodesian police.
The next day, Greg Roberts was warned that the police and PNG armed forces were "after him". He soon left the island.
Lawrence Bunbun, an official by the PNG Ministry of Foreign Affairs, acknowledged that the Australian government had
announced that "they didn't want anyone going in to see them, that it was not the business of anyone else" under the
pretext of protecting the identity of the inmates.
The asylum seekers' centre of Manus is sheltering 360 refugees, 80% Iraqi citizens . Doctors and hospitals around have
confirmed that some inmates had contracted malaria and some others would be affected by tuberculosis and typhoid.
The Australian government had already decided on 26 January 2002, to forbid the presence of journalists at least one
kilometre around the detention centre of Woomera (Australia). The Immigration minister had declared that this
prohibitive measure corresponded to an "operational decision made by civil protection services in connection with the
security of the inmates".
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PACIFIC MEDIA WATCH ONLINE: http://www.pmw.c2o.org