Australia’s stances on climate crisis and asylum seekers ‘backwards’, Human Rights Watch says

Human rights report slams Australian treatment of refugees as in previous years, and addresses climate for the first time

Australia’s “backwards” positions on global heating and asylum seekers are becoming increasingly unacceptable to the world, a leading human rights group says.

Human Rights Watch launched its annual world report on Thursday, again finding “serious human rights issues” in Australia, despite its overall record as a strong, multicultural democracy.

For the first time, Human Rights Watch focused on climate, an area where Australia was found particularly wanting. The report criticised Australia’s per capita emissions, among the worst in the globe, its huge exports of fossil fuels, and the tax breaks afforded to fossil fuel companies, which have increased 48% since the Paris agreement in 2015.

The report yet again slammed Australia’s treatment of asylum seekers and refugees, including those transferred to Australia and detained in hotel rooms for extended periods, where “access to sunlight, space to exercise, and fresh air is limited”. The plight of asylum seekers was given recent global exposure by the short-term detention of tennis star Novak Djokovic.

Australia’s rates of Indigenous incarceration – accounting for 30% of all adult prisoners, despite making up just 3% of the general population – and the at least 11 deaths in custody last year were also condemned. The report included the shocking statistic that Indigenous children are 17 times more likely to be imprisoned than non-Indigenous children, and criticised Australia for ignoring calls by 31 United Nations member states to raise the age of criminal responsibility to the internationally recommended minimum of 14.

The tough travel restrictions introduced during the pandemic were also highlighted. The report said the decision to deny Australians from returning home was a “punitive approach to travel that left tens of thousands of Australian families separated from their loved ones”.

Human Rights Watch highlighted the inconsistent approaches taken to Australians living in India after the wave in May last year, compared to those living in the US and the UK after similar spikes.

“Strict and inflexible domestic travel restrictions inside Australia left families separated and others unable to return home, with individuals refused permission to travel across state borders for compassionate reasons or medical treatment, despite willingness to abide by quarantine restrictions,” the report said.

Human Rights Watch Australia researcher, Sophie McNeill, said the world increasingly struggled to comprehend why Australia took such “backwards” stances on issues like climate and asylum seekers.

“Increasingly, the rest of the world and Australians are just saying ‘this is unacceptable, we can’t continue like this’,” McNeill told Guardian Australia.

“We’re now seeing that with Australia’s climate policy, you’re increasingly getting that realisation around the world how backwards Australia is on this. The Djokovic issue has also reminded us that we’re also this way on asylum seekers.”

Human Rights Watch’s report said universities in Australia were failing to protect the academic freedom of students who spoke out about China and academics who criticised the Communist party. This, the report said, left them “vulnerable to harassment and intimidation by Chinese government supporters”.

“Chinese pro-democracy students in Australia alter their behaviour and self-censor to avoid threats and harassment from fellow classmates and being ‘reported on’ by them to authorities back home,” the report said.

Sign up to receive an email with the top stories from Guardian Australia every morning

The report also cited the work of the disability royal commission and its criticisms of the slow Covid vaccine rollout for people with disabilities. It similarly cited the aged care royal commission, saying the pandemic had highlighted “systemic understaffing and gaps in regulation”.

“Many aged care facilities use dangerous drugs, often without informed consent, to control the behaviour of older people with dementia,” the report said. “The government has not banned the practice and has not conducted sufficient monitoring of facilities’ compliance with existing regulations.”

Contributor

Christopher Knaus

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
Australia’s credibility on human rights blighted by laws targeting climate protesters and jailing children, report says
Human Rights Watch calls on government to address its own ‘alarming deficiencies’, including detention of children under 14 and treatment of asylum seekers

Daniel Hurst Foreign affairs and defence correspondent

12, Jan, 2023 @3:15 AM

Article image
Morrison government rejects call to phase out coal power ahead of UN session on Australia’s human rights record
The Marshall Islands’ climate request is one of 55 human rights-related recommendations Australia has rejected

Daniel Hurst Foreign affairs and defence correspondent

08, Jul, 2021 @4:14 AM

Article image
Australia's human rights record attacked in global report for 'serious shortcomings'
Human Rights Watch criticises Indigenous incarceration rate, counter-terrorism laws and detention centre abuse

Helen Davidson

18, Jan, 2018 @8:30 AM

Article image
Australia is reported to UN human rights council over illegal detention of asylum seekers
Government condemned for arbitrary detention of three asylum seekers, including a stateless man held for nearly nine years

Ben Doherty

14, Sep, 2018 @8:00 PM

Article image
Human Rights Watch warns US Capitol attack should be 'wake-up call' for Australia
Global group urges the Morrison government to be vigilant about the growth of far-right extremism here

Daniel Hurst

13, Jan, 2021 @11:00 AM

Article image
Video aimed at asylum seekers promotes illegal temporary protection visas
Government tells asylum seekers they will receive only temporary protection in Australia, even though legislation to establish the visas has yet to pass

Ben Doherty

02, Dec, 2014 @8:30 PM

Article image
Human Rights Watch says Papua New Guinea has failed to protect women and children
Organisation warns of grave dangers from rise of populist leaders and issues a scathing assessment of Australia’s nearest neighbour

Helen Davidson

13, Jan, 2017 @1:32 AM

Article image
Afghan Hazara asylum seekers to be forcibly deported from Australia
Refugee advocates say men would be at risk of persecution after two Hazaras with links to Australia were attacked by Taliban

Ben Doherty

07, Oct, 2014 @7:10 AM

Article image
'Sri Lankan asylum surge' story appears at a convenient moment for the government | Katharine Murphy
A front page screaming The Sri Lankans Are Coming appears after outpouring of support for a deported Tamil family

Katharine Murphy

02, Sep, 2019 @7:03 AM

Article image
Australia removes climate 'crisis' from Pacific islands draft declaration
Sources say Canberra has softened language, getting rid of all but one reference to coal

Kate Lyons in Funafuti

14, Aug, 2019 @10:31 PM