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Dutton lashes out at ‘disgusting’ criticism over Tamil asylum family secretly flown to Christmas Island

Peter Dutton has been copping it from all angles following the controversial deportation of a family. Now he’s hit back.

Hundreds rally against Tamil family deportation

Immigration Minister Peter Dutton has hit out on Twitter after facing severe criticism over his dealings with a Tamil asylum seeker family.

The family was secretly moved from Darwin to Christmas Island in the early hours of Saturday morning.

Nadesalingam, Priya and their two children Kopika, 4, and Tharunicaa, 2, were due to be expelled from the country on Thursday night, but were granted a last-minute injunction by a Federal Court judge as their plane flew out of Melbourne.

Minister for Home Affairs Peter Dutton has copped criticism over the move. Picture: AAP Image/Mark Jesser
Minister for Home Affairs Peter Dutton has copped criticism over the move. Picture: AAP Image/Mark Jesser

They landed in Darwin where they were given accommodation at a location surrounded by guards but the situation changed overnight.

“This is senseless cruelty, this is cruelty for the sake of being cruel,” federal Greens leader Richard Di Natale told reporters at a rally in Melbourne on Sunday.

“This is a minister in Peter Dutton taking pleasure in the suffering of others, that’s what going on here. It’s barbaric, it’s cruel and it needs to end.”

However, Dutton has hit back on Twitter this evening.

Tanya Plibersek also launched a scathing attack on Dutton this morning.

“This is a concern as it does not give us access to our client in a manner that we would have in a major city nor are we able to facilitate the witnessing of documents. It’s also isolating for the family and traumatic for them,” she said.

On Saturday, Plibersek called for Mr Dutton to “end this cruelty now” and appeared on ABC’s Insiders on Sunday morning to further the pressure.

“It’s a bit rich for Peter Dutton to talk about precedent when he’s prepared to use his ministerial powers to allow au pairs to enter the country,” Plibersek said.

In August 2018 it was revealed the Home Affairs Minister personally intervened to help the nannies of wealthy and powerful friends dodge immigration rules and enter the country without hassle.

It was the third case of him using ministerial discretion powers to intervene in visa issues involving foreign nannies.

Australians are refusing to remain silent with a day of rallies planned across the country in the hope of saving the family from deportation.

Protests will kick off in all capital cities, and the Queensland town of Biloela on Sunday to demand the federal government let them stay.

“We are calling on the federal government not to deport the Biloela family. They are in real danger if deported back to Sri Lanka,” Refugee Action Collective’s Chris Breen said.

“They have real claims for protection (in Australia).”

Carina Ford believes they’re the only detainees on the island and claims “it may have been specifically reopened for them”.

“I don’t really understand the motive of the Christmas Island move given that there are many other functioning detention centres in Australia, on the mainland,” she said.

Priya told friends and supporters that aside from staff and guards they are all alone.

“My children have been separated from their world,” she said.

The move has created logistical issues for lawyers who due to face the Federal Circuit Court on Monday and Federal Court on Wednesday.

Federal Court Judge Mordy Bomberg on Friday extended an interim injunction until Wednesday as two-year-old Tharunicaa had not been assessed for a protection visa.

Labor frontbencher Bill Shorten has called on the government to “just let them stay”.

But Home Affairs Minister Peter Dutton has refused.

“I would like the family to accept that they are not refugees, they’re not owed protection by our country,” he told the Nine Network on Friday.

The case has been “comprehensively assessed” and reviewed since 2012, a Home Affairs spokeswoman added.

Meanwhile, Alan Jones on Saturday afternoon tweeted he was “sickened” by the news and called for Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison to intervene in the case.

Outside the Federal Court of Australia on Saturday afternoon, Ms Ford said that the family were “obviously distressed”.

In a statement, campaigners trying to keep the family in Australia say Priya and Nadesalingam’s phones had been confiscated to prevent them from alerting supporters.

“Amid much speculation as to what the Australian Government’s plans were for this family, the Department of Immigration lawyers assured the family’s lawyer there were no plans to split the family, and they were being held in Darwin,” the statement read.

“This is the second flight in as many days under the cover of darkness, taking this family even further away from the support of the community that loves them.”

It is disturbing to learn that this beautiful family have been singled out and sent to the detention centre on Christmas...

Posted by Bring Priya, Nades and their girls home to Biloela on Friday, 30 August 2019

Priya was able to make contact with family and friends when they arrived at Christmas Island.

“My children have been separated from their world,” she said.

The Department of Home Affairs has been contacted ad refused to make comment.

A view of the detention centre when it was in use.
A view of the detention centre when it was in use.

The Christmas Island immigration detention centre, more than 2000km from Australia, was closed in 2018 and later made available on a “contingency” basis.

The move to Christmas Island has been slammed by several political commentators, including columnist Van Badham, who described the Government as a “pack of rat b**tards”.

“Is this the “promise of Australia” we heard so much about? A promise to terrorise KIDS?” she wrote.

Journalist Natalie Forrest called it an “absolute national disgrace”.

The injunction order granted on Thursday night means the family’s two-year-old daughter Tharunicaa cannot be expelled from the country until a court hearing on Wednesday, as her claims for asylum have not yet been assessed.

But the family’s lawyer, Carina Ford, said the injunction did not protect Nadesalingam, Priya or Kopika from being removed.

“It will be left to the Department (of Immigration) and the (Home Affairs) Minister to determine what to do with the remaining members of the family,” she said.

Tamil asylum seekers Nadesalingnam, wife Priya, and their Australian-born daughters Tharunicaa and Kopika. Picture: Twitter
Tamil asylum seekers Nadesalingnam, wife Priya, and their Australian-born daughters Tharunicaa and Kopika. Picture: Twitter
Supporters of a Tamil refugee family wait outside the Darwin International Airport, where their plane landed after an emergency injunction was issued on Friday night. Picture: AAP Image/Patrina Malone.
Supporters of a Tamil refugee family wait outside the Darwin International Airport, where their plane landed after an emergency injunction was issued on Friday night. Picture: AAP Image/Patrina Malone.

CASE PUTS HUMAN FACE ON DEPORTATION

The case has highlighted the plight of refugees and asylum seekers in Australia, which rarely plays out in the public eye.

Australia has previously been condemned by the UN Refugee Agency for its treatment of asylum seekers on Manus Island and Nauru, while Human Rights Watch said in its 2019 World Report that “serious issues” remained.

“Many refugees and asylum seekers suffer from poor mental health or mental illness due to, or exacerbated by, years of detention and uncertainty about their futures,” the report said.

“As a member of the Tamil community, we’re all heartbroken by how this family has been treated by our government,” Aran Mylvaganam, a spokesman from the Tamil Refugee Council, said.

Videos taken by the family showed how they were loaded into two separate vans on Thursday night, as they were transported to Melbourne Airport. They were then separated again as officials prepared them for their flight.

“My baby crying,” Priya can be heard saying in one video, as she’s held back by staff.

Another video showed the children crying as Priya was dragged on-board the plane.

“This is hard to watch, but we must not look away. And we all must ask ourselves if this is really what we want for this family and our country,” the campaign to keep the family in Australia said on Facebook.

Staff from Serco wait at the door of a secure apartment at Mercure Hotel in Darwin before moving the Tamil family back to airport. Picture: Darrian Traynor/Getty Images.
Staff from Serco wait at the door of a secure apartment at Mercure Hotel in Darwin before moving the Tamil family back to airport. Picture: Darrian Traynor/Getty Images.
Darwin resident Iyngaranathan Selvaratnam said he watched on as the Tamil asylum seeker family at the heart of a deportation drama were whisked away by Australian Border Force officers to the Darwin airport tarmac to board another plane. Picture: Katrina Bridgeford
Darwin resident Iyngaranathan Selvaratnam said he watched on as the Tamil asylum seeker family at the heart of a deportation drama were whisked away by Australian Border Force officers to the Darwin airport tarmac to board another plane. Picture: Katrina Bridgeford

— with AAP’s Christine McGinn.

Originally published as Dutton lashes out at ‘disgusting’ criticism over Tamil asylum family secretly flown to Christmas Island

Original URL: https://www.couriermail.com.au/news/national/tamil-family-facing-deportation-asks-peter-dutton-to-open-your-heart/news-story/b60d975bb2cf8bde605a78fdc692b42e