The detainees said they were fearful of hostility from locals outside the camp, and said the new centres were not fully operational, with a lack of security, sufficient water or electricity.
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 centres, with the others insisting they should be resettled in third countries.
Rights group Amnesty International said the refugees’ safety fears were “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”.
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 centres 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”. “A number of people… have been moved and we would expect the number, which up until this morning had been about 370 people within that centre, would drop obviously well below that now,” he told Sky News.
He added that a “small number” of men were arrested during Thursday’s action, including Iranian refugee and journalist Behrouz Boochani, who has been acting as a spokesman for the detainees.
Boochani was later released. Police commissioner Baki said he was neither arrested nor charged but moved to one of the transition centres.
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, but the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) said Thursday it was troubled by reports received by its staff on Manus that force was being used to remove refugees and asylum seekers.
“UNHCR has been given assurances that excessive force has not been used, but cannot independently confirm as staff have not been granted full access to the facility,” the refugee agency said in a statement.
Published in Daily Times, November 24nd 2017.
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