Nauru asylum baby to remain in Australia
Family might be returned to camp if denied refugee status

Family might be returned to camp if denied refugee status
Australia said on Sunday that a baby girl facing repatriation to an offshore immigration detention camp would go to an onshore facility instead, easing tension that peaked in a blockade outside a hospital where she is a patient.
Doctors at the Lady Cilento Children’s Hospital in Brisbane had refused to release the one-year-old girl after completion of her treatment for serious burns, adding to pressure on the government over its tough asylum-seeker policy.
The number of asylum-seekers trying to reach Australia is small in comparison with those arriving in Europe, but border security is a hot-button political issue in Australia, which is scheduled to hold a national election later in 2016.
Federal immigration minister Peter Dutton said the infant, known only as Baby Asha, would shortly be released into community detention, which allows free movement, in Brisbane.
However, Mr Dutton stressed that the family could still be returned to a camp on the tiny South Pacific island of Nauru, about 3,000 km northeast of Australia, if they were not deemed to be genuine refugees.
Asha was flown in January from the Nauru centre, which houses more than 500 people, to Brisbane for hospital treatment. The facility has been widely criticised for harsh conditions and reports of systemic child abuse.
Hundreds of Australians held an overnight vigil at the hospital, blocking exits and stopping cars in a bid to halt Asha’s removal. The protest drew wide attention and support in Australia, with the Twitter hashtag #BabyAsha trending worldwide.
“The advice I’ve received is that the doctors from the hospital have said they would be happy for the baby to go out into community detention,” Mr Dutton said. “But at some point, if people have (asylum claim) matters finalised in Australia, then they will be returning to Nauru — that’s exactly the same treatment that we’ve applied equally.”
The high court in February rejected a legal test case that challenged Australia’s right to deport 267 refugee children and their families who had been brought to Australia from Nauru for medical treatment.
Hundreds of Australians held an overnight vigil at the hospital, blocking exits and stopping cars in a bid to halt Asha’s removal. The protest drew wide attention and support in Australia, with the Twitter hashtag #BabyAsha trending worldwide.
“Together we did it!” tweeted Kon Karapanagiotidis, chief executive of the Asylum Seeker Resource Centre, after Mr Dutton’s announcement.
Australia maintains a policy of sending asylum-seekers who attempt to reach the country by boat to camps on Nauru or on Manus island in Papua New Guinea. They are not offered resettlement in Australia.