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Australia has used offshore processing for asylum-seekers attempting to reach Australia by boat since 2013. (ABC News/Immigration Department)

The St Vincent de Paul Society National Council says the Senate inquiry’s final report into offshore processing and resettlement arrangements falls short of grappling with the scale of human suffering caused by Australia’s offshore detention regime.

National president Mark Gaetani said it was welcome that the committee’s main report referred to the society’s submission on the need for stronger transparency and oversight, and that it recommended greater accountability in offshore arrangements.

While those steps matter, they do not answer the central moral and policy failure at the heart of this system.  

“The main report does not properly confront the grave human rights abuses and the appalling conditions endured by vulnerable people subjected to this regime. That evidence was raised across the overwhelming majority of submissions to the inquiry and cannot be treated as secondary,” Mr Gaetani said.

In its submission to the inquiry, the St Vincent de Paul Society said Australia’s offshore processing regime and related third-country arrangements continue to cause serious harm to people seeking protection, and noted that people remain in Port Moresby, on Nauru and in Australia without secure long-term outcomes after more than a decade of policy failure.

“The fundamental question is not only whether there is enough oversight of this system, but why such a harmful system is still allowed to continue,” Mr Gaetani said.

The society said the dissenting report from senator David Shoebridge more directly addressed the human consequences of offshore detention and the need for a permanent resolution. 

In particular, the dissenting report recommends ending third-country resettlement arrangements and offshore processing in Nauru and Papua New Guinea, and ensuring refugees subjected to this system have a permanent home. 

“We support the call to end offshore processing and ensure that people who have already endured years of trauma, uncertainty and displacement are given a permanent place to rebuild their lives in safety and dignity,” Mr Gaetani said. 

The society continues to call for:

  • the establishment of a royal commission into immigration detention; 
  • an end to offshore processing and harmful third-country arrangements; 
  • durable resettlement pathways for all people still subject to this regime; 
  • stronger transparency, oversight and public accountability; 
  •  policies that uphold human dignity and Australia’s human rights obligations. 

FULL STORY

Offshore detention inquiry report must be a turning point (St Vincent de Paul Society)