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Asylum
seekers from Afghanistan, Iraq and Iran cry
as Indonesian officers
force them to leave the
Australian vessel Hermia docked at Indah Kiat
port in
Merak, Indonesia’s Banten province in this April 9, 2012
file
photo. (Reuters Photo/Aulia Pratama)
|
Sydney. An asylum-seeker who lost his eye during a
riot at an Australian immigration detention center in Papua New Guinea
sued the government and British security firm G4S Tuesday for
compensation.
Law firm Maurice Blackburn said the asylum-seeker, who is in his 30s
but was not named, had his right eye removed and a titanium plate and
screws inserted into his face.
It followed “severe head trauma”, a ruptured eye and fractures he
suffered during unrest in February at the camp on Manus Island.
“Our client has suffered enormously, both physically and
psychologically, because of what we say is the failure of the
[Australian] Commonwealth and G4S to provide a safe and secure
environment for people at the Manus Island detention center,” Maurice
Blackburn principal Jane McDermott said.
She added that the man — who arrived in Australia by boat from
Indonesia in October — was suffering post-traumatic stress disorder,
depression, anxiety and suicidal thoughts, and was also being assessed
for a brain injury.
The case was filed in the Victorian Supreme Court, which allowed the
man to use the pseudonym RN as he feared identification could place him
and his family in danger.
The violence at the camp — which an investigation found was fueled by
frustration and uncertainty about the detainees’ fate under Canberra’s
hardline immigration policy — left one Iranian asylum-seeker dead and 69
people injured.
Asylum-seekers arriving in Australia since July 2013 have been sent
to camps on Manus Island and Nauru. They will be resettled in those
countries if their refugee claims are valid.
Maurice Blackburn said the asylum-seeker’s eye was replaced with a
prosthetic implant following treatment at a Brisbane hospital.
He is currently being held at the Villawood Immigration Detention Center in Sydney.
The man said he feared being sent back to Manus Island and that he
had “not felt very good, either physically or mentally, since I was
brought to Villawood”.
“I was inside [the Manus Island camp] when the attack started. I went
outside to see what was happening,” he said in a statement.
“When I went outside, I was hit in the right eye with a rock. I knew straight away that my eye had been badly damaged.”
The first court hearing will be on September 13.
By Agence France-Presse on 11:41 am Jul 02, 2014
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