SYDNEY – Angry asylum seekers set fire to an immigration detention centre in Sydney yesterday, burning part of it to the ground after Australian authorities denied some of their requests for refuge, local media reported.
No one was injured in the incident, immigration authorities said, but it marks one of the most serious eruptions of unrest among asylum seekers in Australia, where the government’s policy of indefinite detention is a controversial political issue.
Dozens of asylum seekers at the Villawood immigration detention centre, which accommodates many of those whose requests for refuge have been rejected and are pending deportation, climbed on to roofs late on Wednesday night and began setting fire to buildings.
“Miraculously there have been no injuries,” immigration department spokesman Sandi Logan told national television. “At one stage there, the detainees were hurling roof tiles at them [firefighters], preventing them from extinguishing the blaze.”
By daybreak yesterday, the fires had been extinguished and the situation at the centre was under control, he added.
In recent years, Australia has seen increasing numbers of asylum seekers from countries such as Afghanistan and Sri Lanka arriving by boat via neighbouring countries like Indonesia.
The government says detention is necessary for national security, but critics of the policy say indefinite detention is cruel and leads to mental illness, noting people can spend years locked up before their status is determined. – (Reuters)