Current conditions in Australia`s
detention centres are getting worse for asylum seekers, they are being detained
for long periods of time and they not knowing when and if they will get
accepted as refugees or will be deported back to their home country.
The period of detained asylum seekers
witness self-harm, suicide and protests which causes more depression for them. Recently
a 44-year-old Iranian man was transferred to hospital from
Villawood detention centre with chest pains on Saturday 25th February but died
early on Monday 27th February because of an apparent heart attack.
The Iranian man arrived in Australia by
plane in April 2010 and was in detention since then. Papers had been lodged
with the Iranian embassy for his deportation after his asylum claim had been repeatedly rejected, and the man, previously jailed by
the Iranian regime and whose brother was executed, feared for his life.
Mr Ian Rintoul, the Head of the
Refugee Action Coalition said the man had a wife and two children in Iran and a
cousin in Australia. He said he had been living in Villawood's housing section for
four weeks before being taken to hospital.
Dr Michael Dudley, the chairman of
Suicide Prevention Australia, said the link between anxiety and heart disease
was well known, and he had written a psychiatric assessment of the man, that
clearly stated prolonged detention was worsening his depression and
post-traumatic stress disorder.
''He clearly had symptoms of panic,
palpitations, sweating, neck and chest pain and was unable to sleep because of
his worries. Every night he had nightmares of what would happen to his family.
He had flashbacks to events in Iran, triggered by events at Villawood including
federal police and riot squad raids on rooms,'' Dr Dudley said. ''His vulnerability
was really compounded by his detention and the strong possibility of being
deported to his death”
Dr Dudley`s report on the Iranian man
had said he should be moved to community detention in line with department
guidelines. The Australian Immigration Department refused the man's release
into community detention, stating that two psychiatric assessments did not
specify he could not be treated for his mental illness inside a detention
centre.
Mohammad Sadeghphour, a member of Australian Supporters
of Democracy in Iran, said: ''The Iranian regime didn't kill him, but
unfortunately our government did.''
Mr Sadeghphour said ''When I saw him last week he was a
different guy. He was so worried about his children and his wife. The Iranian community
wrote letters to the Minister and detention centre management.''
He is the fifth Villawood detainee to
die in 18 months. The previous four were suicides. An Immigration Department
spokeswoman said the department expressed its sympathy to the man's family and
would co-operate with any investigation.
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