At least Hundreds of men sent to the remote camp on PNG’s Manus Island have refused to leave the site for new, PNG-run centers since Australia closed it on October 31.
Over the past three weeks only around 200 out of approximately 600 men held in Manus have agreed to leave voluntarily for three nearby transition centers, with the others insisting they should be resettled in third countries.
On Thursday, police moved in and took 50 men to alternative camps, PNG Police Commissioner Gari Baki said.
“We are doing the best we can and the refugees cannot continue to be stubborn and defiant,” Baki said in a statement Thursday afternoon.
“The fact is that we are not moving them into the jungle. They are being relocated to two centers where there is water, electricity, food and medical services.”
Australia’s Immigration Minister Peter Dutton indicated the police operation would continue, saying “there is a lot of work that is ongoing.”
Detainees had earlier tweeted and posted photos and videos on social media of PNG authorities sweeping through the camp, saying police had pulled belongings from rooms and shouted at them to get into buses.
Boochani tweeted that police had destroyed their shelters and water tanks, and said the refugees were on “high alert” and “under attack.”
There were no immediate reports of injuries.
Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull reaffirmed his government’s stance Thursday that none of the refugees, who were sent to the camp for trying to reach Australia by boat, would be brought to his country.
The men are barred from resettling in Australia, and Turnbull said their actions were meant to push Canberra into changing its mind.
They think this is some way they can pressure the Australian government to let them come to Australia. Well, we will not be pressured,” he told reporters in Canberra.
“The people on Manus should go to the alternative places of safety with all of the facilities they need.”
Global rights group Amnesty International said Thursday there were “risks of serious injury if the authorities use force,” and called for the refugees to be brought to Australia.
The government has tried to resettle the refugees in third countries, including the United States, with little success.
Just 54 refugees have been accepted by Washington, with 24 flown to America in September.
Despite widespread criticism, Canberra has defended its offshore processing policy as stopping deaths at sea after a spate of drownings.
The camps’ conditions have been slammed by the United Nations and human rights groups amid reports of widespread abuse, self-harm and mental health problems.
Amnesty said the refugees’ safety fears were also “well-founded,” adding that some had previously been “attacked and seriously injured” by locals “who have made clear they do not want the men on Manus.”
The Australian Medical Association has called on Canberra to allow doctors to help the refugees, warning there was a “worsening and more dangerous situation emerging on Manus.”
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