As COVID-19 spreads, protesters ramp up calls for refugees to be released from hotel detention

October 24, 2021
Issue 
October 23 rally outside the Park Hotel. Photo: Refugee Action Collective (Victoria)/Facebook

Protesters outside the Park Hotel in Carlton on October 23 demanded that all the refugees are released: 46 sick people remained locked up.

Since the first COVID-19 case was found on October 17, it is rapidly spreading through the inadequately ventilated hotel. on October 24 said that 20 men had tested positive 鈥 鈥渁lmost half of the men detained in this hotel prison鈥.

Azizi,聽who has contracted the virus, spoke from inside the Park Hotel via phone. 鈥淭here is no medical treatment, there is no doctor. For more than one week, I am sick聽and I didn鈥檛 see the doctor. In the last 24 hours, only one nurse has come here and given me two [paracetamols] and not more.鈥

Azizi pointed out that the Australian Border Force did not allow the paramedics from the ambulance to go inside the Park Hotel. 鈥淔or what reason are they keeping me here in detention?"聽he asked.

Protester Andrea Borteli told 91自拍论坛 that it is 鈥渄espicable鈥 that the men are in detention at all, let alone聽with this deadly infection. 鈥淎s a health care worker, I鈥檓 so ashamed that we are treating people like this.鈥

A refugee, detained in the Park Hotel, told GL聽that he is isolating in聽his room after contracting COVID-19 to prevent the spread. Referring to Serco, he said 鈥渕ost of the time they don鈥檛 tell us or their guards what鈥檚 going on. They just keep us in the dark".

Speaking to the rally, Atena, Junior Taekwondo champion and Iranian refugee on a bridging visa asked how we can celebrate being out of lockdown 鈥渁re we really free when our brothers and sisters are locked up in detention?鈥澛

Lavanya Thavaraja from the Tamil Refugee Council聽drew attention聽to the harsh reality of temporary visas. The聽government 鈥渦ses refugees to promote racism and paint them as criminals and then it allows them to be exploited in workplaces, deny them any welfare support, and force them to do unsafe jobs.鈥

Farhad Bandesh, a Medevac refugee who has suffered nearly 8 years of torture,聽spoke to the rally聽via phone. 鈥淢y friends and I protested from inside the MITA [Melbourne Immigration Transit Accommodation] and Mantra hotel for freedom and safety. These people fled danger and persecution to find safety, humanity and love but the Australian government has locked them up for so many years and exiled them to horrible torture.鈥

He said governments have 鈥減ut our lives in danger so many times鈥, pointing out that a guard brought COVID-19 in to the Park Hotel and it has 鈥渟pread to sick people who have no right or ability to protect themselves鈥.聽

Chris Breen from the Refugee Action Collective (RAC) Victoria described the hotel as a 鈥渄eath trap鈥. The refugees have been detained for more than eight years. Those 鈥渨ho were聽really sick were brought here [from offshore prison camps] under the Medevac [laws]. They often didn鈥檛 get treatment.鈥

Referring to refugees who came by boat, Hassan Jaber from the聽and Justice for Refugees and聽a temporary protection visa聽holder said 鈥渨e cannot judge people by the way they come here, seeking asylum is legal鈥.聽

Greens MP Tim Read also called for the refugees鈥 release.https://ssl.gstatic.com/ui/v1/icons/mail/images/cleardot.gif

RAC reported that the MITA, the detention centre in Broadmeadows, has also had virus scares and was locked down, after guards tested positive.

Refugees聽there have said they have been left hungry due to staff and food shortages. Those locked down in an internal compound have received only two small meals a day. 鈥淭he shortages of cereal, bread, and milk 鈥 has already raised tensions among people being held in the locked down compound.鈥

[Come to the next on November 7, which has been endorsed by the Australian Nursing and Midwifery Federation and the Australian Education Union.]

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