Responses
Asylum
Are healthcare professionals working in Australia's immigration detention centres condoning torture?
Compose a Response to This Article
Other responses
Jump to comment:
- Published on: 26 January 2016
- Published on: 26 January 2016Children in Australian immigration detention - justice demands actionShow More
Abstract
Despite a damning 2014 Australian Human Rights Commission report into the plight of children in immigration detention, the disturbing findings of reported in the 2015 Moss Inquiry into allegations relating to conditions and circumstances at the Australian regional migrant processing centre in Nauru, and compelling evidence of the harm suffered by these children, Australia continues to hold children in im...
Conflict of Interest:
None declared.
Other content recommended for you
- Prolonged immigration detention, complicity and boycotts
- Is Australia engaged in torturing asylum seekers? A cautionary tale for Europe
- Doctors should boycott working in Australia’s immigration centres and must continue to speak out on mistreatment of detainees—despite the law
- Medical involvement in torture today?
- Should clinicians boycott Australian immigration detention?
- Preventive detention: the ethical ground where politics and health meet. Focus on asylum seekers in Australia
- Asylum seeking children and adolescents in Australian immigration detention on Nauru: a longitudinal cohort study
- Dirty work: well-intentioned mental health workers cannot ameliorate harms in offshore detention
- Nursing in asylum seeker detention in Australia: care, rights and witnessing
- Torture, healthcare and Australian immigration detention