Tuesday, 21 May 2013
Home Tamil Affairs International Affairs Editorial Opinion Feature Culture & Community
Latest Entries:
Amnesty 'appalled' at Australian report
Tamil Guardian 14 August 2012 Print ArticleE-mail ArticleFeedback On Article
   

In a statement, Amnesty International slammed the recently released report by an Australian expert panel on asylum seekers.

Highlighting the fact that the panel were "ignoring altogether the fundamental right to seek asylum or the realities of why vulnerable people flee from horrific circumstances", Amnesty said it was "appalled" by the recommendations.

Amnesty International’s refugee spokesperson, Dr Graham Thorn, said,

“Sending asylum seekers to places like Malaysia, Nauru and Papua New Guinea is unacceptable and a complete outsourcing of Australia’s human rights obligations.”

“The ‘Pacific Solution’ was a failed policy, and a wildly expensive one, that was internationally condemned for breaching the human rights of some of the world's most vulnerable people."

"People languished in Nauru for years out of sight of public and media scrutiny, before ultimately ending up in Australia. It is shocking to see the panel favour punitive measures that deliberately hold vulnerable people hostage, separate families and leave them in limbo."

Amnesty International welcomes the proposed increase in Australia’s humanitarian intake and the panel’s recommendation for Australia to work further to increase regional protection."

Any solutions focussed on punishing refugees and asylum seekers rather than protecting them are illegal under Article 31 of the Refugee Convention."

“Amnesty International has also consistently highlighted the human rights abuses faced by refugees in Malaysia, including caning and arbitrary detention in horrific conditions. Such solutions are actually counter-productive and will undermine any regional solution that is concerned with the genuine protection of refugees.”

 
Share on Facebook Print ArticlePrint Article E-mail ArticleE-mail Article Feedback On ArticleFeedback On Article
 
 
HIGHLIGHTS
  Tamil Affairs
Tamil Guardian 21 May 2013
American Tamils light flames of remembrance
Tamils across the state of California held a candle lit vigil to commemorate the 4th year anniversary of the Mullvaikkal massacre.  

Speakers at the events, [more]

Tamil Guardian 21 May 2013
SL minister to file motion against 13A
Sri Lanka's Media Minister, Champika Ranawaka will file a motion in parliament against the 13th Amendment and the provincial council system, reports the Colombo Gazette. [more]

Kumaravadivel Guruparan & Sivakami Rajamanoharan Tamil Guardian 21 May 2013
Four years on, genocide continues off the battlefield
Originally published on OpenDemocracy.net/OpenSecurity on 20th May 2013: In May 2009 as the armed conflict between the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) and the government of Sri Lanka came to a harrowing end, [more]

Tamil Guardian 20 May 2013
Sri Lanka’s Army Commander lashes out at ‘foreign intervention’
Lieutenant General Jagath Jayasuriya has slated concerns raised by foreign representatives about army camps in the island’s North-East.

Jayasuriya further added that the LLRC reported no deliberate targeting of civilians by the army during the war and praised the army’s role in developing the country as “peacetime troops”.

Speaking on a state-run radio station, [more]

Tamil Guardian 20 May 2013
Tamils in Belgium remember
Gathering together, Tamils in Belgium held a remembrance event for those who died during the final stages of the war, [more]

Tamil Guardian 20 May 2013
HRW - no progress 4 years on
In a statement marking 4 years since the end of the armed conflict, Human Rights Watch said that there had been "no progress 4 years on". See here for full statement, [more]

Tamil Guardian 20 May 2013
British construction firm confirms £35m deal with SL Govt
A renowned bridge construction company, Clevelend Bridge, has successfully won a £35million contract to replace rural bridges in Sri Lanka. [more]

Tamil Guardian 20 May 2013
No10 supports Glasgow invitation to Sri Lanka

After criticism from human rights organisations, not to invite Sri Lanka to a World War I Commonwealth commemoration event, Downing Street has said invitations should go out as usual. [more]


Print Editions

 
 

Contact Tamil Guardian
www.tamilguardian.com