Australian government shuts two detention centres, citing drop in refugee numbers

The federal government says immigration detention centres in Melbourne and Sydney can be closed as the number of boat arrivals has dropped under its policies.

Sydney's Villawood Immigration Detention Centre

Sydney's Villawood Immigration Detention Centre is the largest detention centre in Australia. Source: SBS News

Two of the country's nine high-security immigration detention centres are being closed in what the Morrison government says is a vindication of its border protection policy.

The Maribyrnong facility in Melbourne will close immediately after the last of the detainees there were moved to other centres on Monday.

The Blaxland centre, which is part of Villawood in Sydney, will close by May with the detainees also moved to the other seven centres.

There are 1250 people now in immigration detention in Australia. They are boat arrivals dating back to 2013 or earlier, people who have had their visas cancelled on character grounds and those who have overstayed their visas.

Immigration Minister David Coleman has called it "another milestone in the ramping-down of Australia's onshore immigration detention network".

He said in a statement Labor's "catastrophic" border policy had forced the Rudd and Gillard governments to open 17 immigration detention facilities.
Refugee activists march around the Villawood detention centre as part of a protest.
Source: AAP
About 1000 people remain in immigration detention in offshore processing centres on Nauru and Manus, some have been there since 2013. The Christmas Island camp has been closed.

"The government has stopped the boats, got the children out of detention and closed the once-full immigration detention facilities," Immigration Minister David Coleman announced in a statement.

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By Helen Chen
Source: SBS News

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