A massive hunger strike is underway at what some are calling "the Guantánamo Bay of the Pacific." The Manus Island detention center is paid for by the Australian government and run by an Australian contractor, Transfield Services, but located offshore on Papua New Guinea’s soil. The inmates are not accused of any crimes — they are asylum seekers from war-ravaged countries who are waiting indefinitely for their refugee status determinations. They are asking the United Nations to intervene against the Australian federal government’s plan to resettle them in Papua New Guinea, where they say they could face persecution. Some have barricaded themselves behind the detention center’s high wire fences; others have resorted to increasingly drastic measures such as drinking washing detergent, swallowing razor blades, and even sewing their mouths shut to protest their confinement. We speak with Australian human rights lawyer Jennifer Robinson and Alex Kelly, a social justice filmmaker who organized a New York City vigil in solidarity with the Manus Island detainees.
This is a clash between the right of a sovereign nation to decide who it wants to accept into the fabric of its society or not versus the plight of refugees from war.
Some years ago, in the context of the infamous American War in Vietnam there was a very significant flight of Vietnamese refugees that sought sanctuary in Malaysia. Malaysia would not let them in but sequestered them in one of its outlying islands.
In the end, they were never relocated in Malaysia. They were accepted by other nations.
The one thing that I do not know is whether there is an international law that states that a war refugee has a RIGHT of sanctuary in a country of his choice; and to deny him might amount to a WAR CRIME.
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