SYDNEY: Rights groups on Monday (Feb 17) denounced an Australian plan to send three violent foreign criminals – including a murderer – to live on the tiny Pacific nation of Nauru.
Canberra said on Sunday it had paid an undisclosed sum to Nauru – population about 13,000 – in return for it issuing 30-year visas to the trio, who lost their Australian visas due to criminal activity.
“There has to be consideration of the lawfulness of banishing people offshore when they’ve been living as part of our community,” said Jane Favero, deputy chief executive of the Asylum Seeker Resource Centre.
“It’s a complete disregard of people’s human rights.”
Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke said the three would be held in immigration detention until they are put on a flight to Nauru or a legal challenge is lodged.
“When somebody has come and treated Australia in a way that has shown appalling character their visas do get cancelled, and when their visas are cancelled they should leave,” Burke told reporters.
“All three, though, are violent offenders. One is a murderer,” he said.
Once in Nauru, they would live in individual dwellings with a shared kitchen space and be allowed to work and move freely, Burke added.
Authorities have not disclosed the identities, gender or nationalities of the trio, or said whether they had served sentences for their crimes.
Nauru is one of the world’s smallest countries with a mainland measuring just 20 sq km.
Phosphate mining once made Nauru one of the world’s richest countries per capita, but that boon has long dried up, leaving much of the mainland a barren moonscape and its people facing high unemployment and health issues.
Australia’s government has been searching for a way to deal with migrants who have no other country to go to when their visas are cancelled.