Second self-immolation attempt on Nauru

SBS World News Radio: A female refugee is in a critical condition after setting herself on fire at the detention facility on Nauru. It comes just days after a male asylum seeker died after also setting himself alight at the centre.

Second self-immolation attempt on NauruSecond self-immolation attempt on Nauru

Source: AAP

Another refugee sets themselves on fire on Nauru.

The Refugee Action Coalition has identified the woman as Hadon, saying the 21 year old was one of three refugees returned to Nauru last week after being taken from Brisbane's immigration transit accommodation.

Asylum seeker advocates say she was brought to Australia in November for treatment for a head injury.

Last week, a 23-year-old Iranian man known as Omid died in a Brisbane hospital after also setting himself ablaze, during a visit by United Nations refugee officials.

In a statement, the Nauruan government says it's upset that people are going to these lengths to "attempt to influence the Australian government's immigration policies", saying that refugees and asylum seekers actually have better facilities than Nauruans.

Immigration Minister Peter Dutton says some refugee advocates are encouraging the asylum seekers with messages of false hope.

"There's a lot of advice we receive, intelligence that we receive, contact between the staff and those people on Nauru, there is a lot of publicly available ifnormation in relation to some of the social media messaging as well so there is no doubt about the actions of some."

Mr Dutton says the government has no intention of making any changes to its border protection policies.

"We are not going to change those policies and the advocates by providing the false hope to these people really is to be condemned. Now they can provide offers of support, that is completely reasonable but to provide advice otherwise is very, very dangerous and we're seeing that play out at the moment and we are not going to allow for it to continue."

Greens Senator Sarah Hanson-Young denies refugee advocates are giving refugees and asylum seekers false hope.

Senator Hanson-Young says advocates play a critical role and aren't influencing desperate people to commit 'dreadful acts' to influence the Australian government's immigration policies.

"The minister says how dare, how dare anybody give these people hope. Well, it is hope that is keeping these people alive. The policy is designed to break people's spirits, it's designed to steal their hope. It is only hope that is going to keep these people alive. And I will work every day, as I know my colleagues will, as I know advocates around the country will, to ensure that people do have hope."

The head of the Asylum Seeker Resource Centre, Kon Karapanagiotidis says Australia could easily adopt a more generous refugee policy which would not result in asylum seekers taking risky boat journeys.

"At the moment, both parties keep dodging this issue of a regional framework yet they keep using that language. Unfortunately, both continue to sell the Australian public short, think there are more votes in this cruelty and race to the bottom than doing the right thing. This model could work, Australia could easily quadruple its refugee intake, it could easily invest in building genuine relationships with Indonesia and Malaysia."


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3 min read

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By Andrea Neirhoff

Presented by Santilla Chingaipe



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