Australia’s offshore processing of asylum seekers in Nauru and PNG: a quick guide to statistics and resources

Updated 19 December 2016

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Elibritt Karlsen
Law and Bills Digest Section

 

This Quick Guide contains official statistics released by the Department of Immigration and Border Protection (DIBP) from the resumption of offshore processing in 2012 until October 2016. The statistics contained herein include:

This Quick Guide also contains:

Annex 1 – List of inquiries and reports into offshore processing
Annex 2 – List of court judgments and related commentary

 

Background

On 8 February 2008, seven months after Kevin Rudd was sworn in as Prime Minister, the former Labor Government announced that the last remaining asylum seekers on Nauru had been transferred to Australia ending the Howard Government’s controversial ‘Pacific Solution’, which had begun in 2001 in response to rising numbers of asylum seekers arriving by boat.

However, by July 2010, then Prime Minister, Julia Gillard announced in her first major policy speech that the Government had begun having discussions with regional neighbours about the possibility of establishing a regional processing centre for the purpose of receiving and processing irregular entrants to the region. Whilst only 25 asylum seekers had travelled by boat to Australia to seek asylum in the 2007–08 financial year by the time Prime Minister Gillard made her announcement in July 2010, more than 5,000 people had travelled by boat to Australia to seek asylum (that is, during the 2009–10 financial year).

Whilst Prime Minister Gillard acknowledged that the number of asylum seekers arriving by boat to Australia was ‘very, very minor’ and that at the current rate of arrival it would take about 20 years to fill the Melbourne Cricket Ground (MCG) with asylum seekers, she identified a number of reasons why the processing of asylum seekers in other countries was, again, considered necessary:

  • to remove the financial incentive for the people smugglers to send boats to Australia
  • to ensure that those arriving by boat do not get an unfair advantage over others
  • to secure Australia’s borders and create a fair and orderly migration
  • to prevent people embarking on a voyage across dangerous seas with the ever present risk of death
  • to ensure that everyone is subject to a consistent, fair assessment process
  • to improve the protection outcomes for refugees by establishing a framework for orderly migration within the region
  • to prevent overcrowding in detention facilities in Australia
  • to respond to increased numbers of unauthorised people movements in the region and around the world and
  • to acknowledge that irregular migration is a global challenge that can only be tackled by nations working together.

Though it took another two years for her Government to secure the statutory and practical arrangements for asylum seekers to be sent to third countries, people began to be transferred to Nauru on 14 September 2012 and to Papua New Guinea (PNG) on 21 November 2012.

Two months before the 2013 federal election, and in the wake of growing support for the Opposition’s tougher border protection policies, newly appointed Prime Minister, Kevin Rudd made a surprise announcement on 19 July 2013 that Australia had entered into a Regional Resettlement Arrangement with PNG. Under the Arrangement, all (not just some) asylum seekers who arrive by boat would be transferred to PNG for processing and settlement in PNG and in any other participating regional State. He subsequently made a similar Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) with Nauru.

Notwithstanding Prime Minister Rudd’s announcement, the Australian Labor Party was unable to secure another term in office and, on 7 September 2013, the Liberal and National parties were voted in to form a Coalition Government, led by Tony Abbott. The current Coalition Government, led by Malcolm Turnbull, continues to implement the former Government’s offshore processing arrangements. However, the offshore processing of asylum seekers in Nauru and PNG has proved contentious for a number of reasons, including:

  • the financial cost (see statistics below)
  • ongoing concerns about the safety and security of asylum seekers and refugees in the Processing Centres and in the broader community
  • ongoing concerns about the desirability and sustainability of involuntary settlement (currently in Nauru and PNG)
  • prolonged uncertainty and punitive living conditions which are said to be causing or exacerbating psychological harm and
  • inadequate transparency and independent oversight.

See Annex 1 for further information about these concerns.

Cost of operating the offshore processing centres in Nauru and PNG

The Parliamentary Library’s 2016­–17 Budget Review explains that the 2016–17 Budget allocated an additional $61.5 million in 2016–17 to support offshore processing arrangements. This built on the additional funding of $342.1 million over two years that was provided in the 2015–16 Mid-Year Economic and Fiscal Outlook (MYEFO) for this purpose. The additional funding, in MYEFO and in the 2016–17 Budget, illustrates the difficulty the Government has in accurately predicting costs in this area. The 2015–16 Budget provided for spending of $810.8 million for irregular maritime arrivals (IMA) Offshore Management in 2015–16. However, the 2016–17 budget papers indicate that estimated actual spending in that year was almost $1.1 billion.

Total number of asylum seekers at Offshore Processing Centres

The first asylum seekers arrived in Nauru on 15 September 2012 and in Papua New Guinea on 21 November 2012. Female asylum seekers were only transferred to PNG during the period 21 November 2012 to 4 July 2013. Since then, all female maritime asylum seekers (and children) have been transferred to Nauru for processing.

The following graph illustrates the combined total number of asylum seekers at the processing centres in PNG and Nauru from September 2012 to September 2016.

It shows that the number of people being accommodated at the centres rose sharply from July 2013 (when the previous Government announced that all maritime asylum seekers would be transferred to an Offshore Processing Centre) to April 2014. However, since then the numbers have been gradually declining.

The Nauru Processing Centre was a detention centre from September 2012 until October 2015, when it became an ‘open centre’, giving people greater freedom of movement. The PNG centre adopted similar measures in May 2016. This change is reflected in the fluidity of the figures after these dates. However, this graph does not contain statistics on the number of asylum seekers and refugees residing offshore within the community.

Total number of asylum seekers at Offshore Processing Centres

Source: Data from October 2013 to September 2016 extracted from DIBP Monthly Operation Sovereign Borders updates; Data from September 2012 to September 2013 provided by DIBP on 17 September 2015.

Note: Approximately 1,000 unauthorised maritime arrivals (UMAs) who entered Australia between 13 August 2012 and 19 July 2013 were taken to a regional processing country. On 19 July 2013 the former Rudd Government announced that these UMAs would be returned to Australia to create capacity for the transfer of UMAs who arrived after 19 July 2013. Returns occurred progressively and were completed in October 2015.

Number of asylum seekers at each Processing Centre

The following table provides a snap-shot of the number of asylum seekers who have been accommodated at each of the processing centres at the end of each month from commencement to October 2016. The number of people accommodated at the PNG Processing Centre peaked at 1,353 (in January 2014), while the number of people accommodated at the Nauru Processing Centre peaked seven months later at 1,233 (in August 2014). The highest number of people accommodated offshore was 2,450 (in April 2014). This table does not contain statistics on the number of asylum seekers and refugees residing offshore within the community.

Month Numbers at PNG
Processing Centre
Numbers at Nauru
Processing Centre
TOTAL at Processing Centres
27 Sept 2012 0 150 150
Oct 2012 0 377 377
29 Nov 2012 19 386 405
30 Dec 2012 155 366 521
Jan 2013 235 415 650
Feb 2013 274 412 686
Mar 2013 254 424 678
Apr 2013 294 420 714
May 2013 302 428 730
Jun 2013 253 490 743
Jul 2013 27 544 571
Aug 2013 538 486 1024#
Sep 2013 858 769 1627
Oct 2013 1137 591 1728
Nov 2013 1139 686 1825
Dec 2013 1229 838 2067
Jan 2014 1353 1012 2365
Feb 2014 1325 1107 2432
Mar 2014 1225 1170 2395
Apr 2014 1273 1177 2450
May 2014 1225 1170 2395
Jun 2014 1189 1169 2358
Jul 2014 1127 1146 2273
Aug 2014 1084 1233 2317
Sep 2014 1060 1140 2200
Oct 2014 1056 1095 2151
Nov 2014 1044 996 2040
Dec 2014 1035 895 1930
Jan 2015 1023 802 1825
Feb 2015 1004 742 1746
Mar 2015 989 718 1707
Apr 2015 971 677 1648
May 2015 943 634 1577
Jun 2015 945 655 1600
Jul 2015 942 637 1579
Aug 2015 936 653 1589
Sep 2015 934 631 1565
Oct 2015 929 621* 1550
Nov 2015 926 543 1469
Dec 2015 922 537 1459
Jan 2016 916 484 1400
Feb 2016 909 470 1379
Mar 2016 905 468 1373
Apr 2016 898 469 1367
May 2016 847** 466 1313
Jun 2016 854 442 1296
Jul 2016 833 411 1244
Aug 2016 823 410 1233
Sep 2016 873 396 1269
Oct 2016 872 390 1262

Source: Data extracted from DIBP Monthly Operation Sovereign Borders updates; additional data provided by DIBP on 17 September 2015. Figures are as at the end of the month unless otherwise stated.

# Approximately 1,000 unauthorised maritime arrivals (UMAs) who entered Australia between 13 August 2012 and 19 July 2013 were taken to a regional processing country. On 19 July 2013, the former Rudd Government announced that these UMAs would be returned to Australia to create capacity for the transfer of UMAs who arrived after 19 July 2013. Returns occurred progressively and were completed in October 2015.

*Nauru Processing Centre became a completely ‘open’ centre on 6 October 2015 (see Government of Nauru announcement).

** PNG Processing Centre reportedly not a closed ‘detention centre’ as of May 2016 (see media reports).

 

Nationalities of asylum seekers at each Processing Centre

The following graph provides a snap-shot of the composition of both Processing Centres at two different points in time. The statistics for PNG were as at mid-February 2014 (noting there has only been one asylum seeker transferred to the Processing Centre since then). The statistics for Nauru were as at 13 July 2015.

This graph illustrates that the vast majority of asylum seekers at both Processing Centres come from Iran. The PNG Processing Centre (which only accommodates males) is also largely composed of asylum seekers from the Middle East including countries such as Afghanistan, Iraq and Pakistan.

In contrast, the Nauru Processing Centre (which accommodates males, females and children) is largely composed of asylum seekers from Sri Lanka, Pakistan, Bangladesh, and with people who have no country of nationality (Stateless).

Nationalities of asylum seekers at each Processing Centre

Source: Statistics provided by the DIBP to the Senate inquiry into the Incident at the Manus Island Detention Centre during 16 February to 18 February 2014; and the Senate Inquiry into the recent allegations relating to conditions and circumstances at the Regional Processing Centre in Nauru.

 

Number of children accommodated at the Processing Centres

The following table shows the number of children accommodated at the Processing Centres each month from November 2012 to October 2016. The highest number of children accommodated at the Processing Centres was 222 in August 2014. Since that time, the numbers have declined significantly to 45 in October 2016.

Month Number of children
Sep 2012 0
Oct 2012 0
29 Nov 2012 4
30 Dec 2012 35
Jan 2013 35
Feb 2013 34
Mar 2013 29
Apr 2013 29
May 2013 26
Jun 2013 12
Jul 2013 0
Aug 2013 30
Sep 2013 87
Oct 2013 108
Nov 2013 109
Dec 2013 116
Jan 2014 132
Feb 2014 177
Mar 2014 208
Apr 2014 190
May 2014 208
Jun 2014 193
Jul 2014 183
Aug 2014 222
Sep 2014 186
Oct 2014 167
Nov 2014 155
Dec 2014 135
Jan 2015 119
Feb 2015 107
Mar 2015 103
Apr 2015 95
May 2015 81
Jun 2015 88
Jul 2015 87
Aug 2015 93
Sep 2015 92
Oct 2015 95
Nov 2015 70
Dec 2015 68
Jan 2016 54
Feb 2016 50
Mar 2016 50
April 2016 50
May 2016 50
Jun 2016 49
Jul 2016 49
Aug 2016 49
Sep 2016 45
Oct 2016 45

Source: Data from October 2013 to October 2016 extracted from DIBP Immigration Detention Statistics; Data from September 2012 to September 2013 provided by DIBP on 17 September 2015.
Note: Figures are as at the end of the month unless otherwise stated.

Number of females accommodated at the Processing Centres

Female asylum seekers were only transferred to PNG during the period 21 November 2012 to 4 July 2013. Since then, all female maritime asylum seekers (and children) were transferred to Nauru for processing. The following table provides a snap-shot of the number of female asylum seekers (excluding minors) accommodated offshore from 2012 to October 2016.

Month Number of women
Oct 2012 0
Nov 2012 7
Dec 2012 47
Jan 2013 47
Feb 2013 47
Mar 2013 40
Apr 2013 41
May 2013 37
Jun 2013 24
Jul 2013 0
Aug 2013 23
Sep 2013 112
Oct 2013 158
Nov 2013 173
Dec 2013 187
Jan 2014 259
Feb 2014 300
Mar 2014 304
Apr 2014 310
May 2014 304
Jun 2014 289
Jul 2014 268
Aug 2014 263
Sep 2014 239
Oct 2014 226
Nov 2014 198
Dec 2014 164
Jan 2015 134
Feb 2015 126
Mar 2015 126
Apr 2015 113
May 2015 105
Jun 2015 114
Jul 2015 111
Aug 2015 114
Sep 2015 114
Oct 2015 113
Nov 2015 80
Dec 2015 79
Jan 2016 58
Feb 2016 55
Mar 2016 55
Apr 2016 56
May 2016 55
Jun 2016 55
Jul 2016 55
Aug 2016 55
Sep 2016 51
Oct 2016 50

Source: Data from October 2013 to October 2016 extracted from DIBP Immigration Detention Statistics; Data from September 2012 to September 2013 provided by DIBP on 17 September 2015.
Note: Figures are as at the end of the month unless otherwise stated.

Number of arrivals and departures from Processing Centres

The following table shows the number of arrivals and departures including countries of destination (excluding Australia) from the Processing Centres since January 2014. With respect to arrivals, the table indicates that only one asylum seeker has been transferred to a Processing Centre since October 2014. With respect to departures, the table shows that 63 asylum seekers returned to their home countries in 2015 (a reduction from 303 in 2014) and the majority are returning to countries in the Middle East such as Iran, Iraq and Lebanon. Four refugees agreed to depart Nauru in June 2015 to be settled in Cambodia.

Month

Number of
arrivals

Number of
departures

Country of destination (excluding Australia)
following departure from Nauru or PNG centre

Jan 2014

132 (PNG)
188 (Nauru)

8

Iran (3) Bangladesh (2) Pakistan (2) Sri Lanka (1)

Feb 2014

133 (Nauru)

30

unknown (1) Iran (15) Iraq (11) India (3)

Mar 2014

52 (Nauru)

14

Lebanon (9) Iran (4) Sudan (1)

Apr 2014

41 (Nauru)

29

Iran (26) India (3)

May 2014

47 (Nauru)

37

Iran (32) Iraq (3) Lebanon (2)

Jun 2014

60 (Nauru)

19

Iran (17) Bangladesh (1) Sudan (1)

Jul 2014

41 (Nauru)

62

Iran (55) Lebanon (3) Bangladesh (1) Iraq (1) Pakistan (1) Sri Lanka (1)

Aug 2014

189 (Nauru)

48

Iran (36) Iraq (3) Egypt (2) Somalia (2) Albania (1) Lebanon (1) Sudan (1) Syria (1) India (1)

Sep 2014

5 (Nauru)

26

Iran (11) Iraq (7)
Lebanon (6) Jordan (1) Pakistan (1)

Oct 2014

0

7

Iraq (3) Iran (2) India (2)

Nov 2014

0

14

Iraq (10) Iran (3) Sri Lanka (1)

Dec 2014

1 (PNG)

9

Iran (6) Afghanistan (1) Lebanon (1) Sri Lanka (1)

 2014 TOTAL

889

 

303

Iran (210) Iraq (38) Lebanon (22) India (9)
Bangladesh (4) Pakistan (4) Sri Lanka (4)
Sudan (3) Somalia (2) Egypt (2) Albania (1) Afghanistan (1) Syria (1) Jordan (1) unknown(1)

Jan 2015

0

1

Iran (1)

Feb 2015

0

15

Iran (6) Iraq (8) Lebanon (1)

Mar 2015

0

9

Iran (8) Afghanistan (1)

Apr 2015

0

12

Iran (9) Sri Lanka (1) Afghanistan (1) Lebanon (1)

May 2015

0

8

Iran (5) Somalia (1) Lebanon (1) Iraq (1)

Jun 2015

0

12

Cambodia (4)
Iran (5) Lebanon (1) Iraq (1) Sri Lanka (1)

Jul 2015

0

0

0

Aug 2015

0

4
2 involuntary

unknown (6)

Sep 2015

0

2

Unknown (2)

Oct 2015

0

1

Unknown (1)

Nov 2015

0

0

0

Dec 2015

0

1

Unknown (1)

2015 TOTAL

0

63

Iran (34) Iraq (10) unknown (10) Lebanon (4)
Afghanistan (2)
Somalia (1) Sri Lanka (2) Cambodia (4)

Jan 2016

0

0

0

Feb 2016

0

1

Unknown (1)

Mar 2016

0

0

0

Apr 2016

0

0

0

May 2016

0

1

Unknown (1)

Jun 2016

0

3

Unknown (3)

Jul 2016

0

1

Unknown (1)

Aug 2016

0

2

Unknown (2)

Sep 2016

0

6

Unknown (6)

Oct 2016

0

4

Unknown (4)

Source: Data extracted from DIBP: Operation Sovereign Borders Monthly Updates.

Note: These statistics also indicate that 137 people returned to their countries of origin in 2013 (including 84 to Iran and Iraq) though publicly available statistics for 2013 are incomplete and thus have been omitted from the above table.

Refugee determinations per month at each Processing Centre

In the context of Australia’s offshore processing, determination of refugee status is the process by which the Nauruan and PNG Governments determine whether a person seeking asylum is considered to be a refugee under their respective national laws. The Government of Nauru commenced its refugee status determinations on 19 March 2013. More than a year later, it began handing down its first tranche of refugee status determinations (though the precise number of persons assessed and outcomes was not made publicly available until July 2014). The Government of PNG commenced its refugee determination process not long after, on 8 July 2013. Though it began handing down its initial assessments a year later, it did not start handing down final determinations until almost two years after it commenced assessing claims. The following graph contains a monthly break-down of the number of final determinations (including merits review) made from commencement to 31 October 2016.

A monthly break-down of the number of final (primary stage) determinations made at the processing centres from commencement to 31 October 2016.

Source: Data extracted from DIBP: Operation Sovereign Borders Monthly Updates.

Note: Though PNG Government officials had completed 1,015 initial assessments as at 31 October 2016 (with 510 persons found to be refugees), this preliminary assessment remains subject to a final refugee determination and is thus not included above.

Percentage of asylum seekers found to be refugees in Nauru

As at 31 October 2016, of the 1,195 people who have had their claims for asylum assessed by the Nauruan Government, 941 (79 per cent) had been found to be refugees.

Percentage of asylum seekers found to be refugees in Nauru

Source: Data extracted from DIBP: Operation Sovereign Borders Monthly Updates.

Percentage of asylum seekers found to be refugees in PNG

As at 31 October 2016, of the 822 people who have had their claims for asylum assessed by the PNG Government, 675 (82 per cent) had been found to be refugees.

Percentage of asylum seekers found to be refugees in PNG

Source: Data extracted from DIBP: Operation Sovereign Borders Monthly Updates.

 

Annex 1 – List of inquiries and reports into offshore processing

NAURU


PNG

 

Annex 2 – List of court judgments and related commentary

Plaintiff S156/2013 v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection & Anor (2014) 254 CLR 28, [2014] HCA 22 (18 June 2014)
The High Court unanimously upheld the validity of the regional processing scheme under sections 198AB and 198AD of the Migration Act 1958 (Migration Act), and former Immigration Minister Bowen’s designation of PNG as a regional processing country. The plaintiff challenged the validity of sections 198AB and 198AD of the Migration Act on the ground that neither provision is supported by any head of power in the Constitution. Section 198AB provides that the Minister may designate that a country is a regional processing country. Section 198AD provides that ‘unauthorised maritime arrivals’ (UMAs) must be taken from Australia to a regional processing country. The plaintiff also challenged the validity of the Minister’s decision of 9 October 2012 to designate PNG as a regional processing country under section 198AB (the designation decision) and the Minister’s decision of 29 July 2013 to give a written direction under subsection 198AD(5) to take UMAs to PNG or to the Republic of Nauru (the direction decision). The High Court unanimously held that sections 198AB and 198AD were valid under the aliens power conferred by subsection 51(xix) of the Constitution. The Court also upheld the validity of the designation decision and the direction decision. The Court rejected the argument that the Minister had failed to have regard to mandatory relevant considerations. The only mandatory condition for the exercise of the power of designation under section 198AB was the Minister forming an opinion that it would be in the national interest to do so.

Commentary and analysis:

 

CPCF v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection & Anor (2015) 255 CLR 514, [2015] HCA 1 (28 January 2015)
A High Court majority (4:3) held that a claim for damages for false imprisonment arising out of the plaintiff’s detention at sea on a Commonwealth vessel should be dismissed. The majority of the Court held that subsection 72(4) of the Maritime Powers Act 2013 authorised a maritime officer to detain the plaintiff for the purpose of taking him from Australia’s contiguous zone to a place outside Australia, being India. Subsection 72(4) states that a maritime officer may detain a person on a detained vessel and take the person, or cause the person to be taken, to a place outside Australia. The Court found that the power under subsection 72(4) was not subject to an obligation to afford the plaintiff procedural fairness. The detention was lawful even though the maritime officer detained the plaintiff in implementation of a decision by the Australian Government, and without independent consideration of whether the detention should have taken place. The detention was also lawful even though, prior to the commencement of the taking of the plaintiff to India, no arrangement existed between Australia and India concerning the reception of the plaintiff in India.

Commentary and analysis:

 

Plaintiff M68-2015 v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection (2016) 257 CLR 42, [2016] HCA 1 (3 February 2016)
A High Court majority upheld the validity of the offshore detention arrangements in place in the Nauru Regional Processing Centre. The Court held that the Memorandum of Understanding between the Commonwealth and Nauru establishing the scheme, as well as the Commonwealth’s funding and participation in the scheme, was supported by section 198AHA of the Migration Act and section 61 of the Constitution. Section 198AHA (inserted into the Migration Act on 30 June 2015 (with retrospective effect after proceedings had commenced) was found to be a valid law of the Commonwealth and provided the statutory framework for the exercise of the Commonwealth’s power to enter into an arrangement for regional processing.

Commentary and analysis:

 

Namah v Pato [2016] PGSC 13 (26 April 2016)

The Papua New Guinea Supreme Court unanimously found the detention of refugees and asylum seekers in the Australian-funded ‘processing’ centre on Manus Island to be unconstitutional. Integral to this decision was the requirement in section 42(1) of the PNG Constitution that, except in specified circumstances, ‘[n]o person shall be deprived of his personal liberty’. In reaching this decision, the Supreme Court rejected the argument that the detention of the refugees and asylum seekers on Manus Island (not of their own accord but as the result of agreement between Australia and PNG), fell within the exception provided for in section 42(1)(g) of the PNG Constitution for detention ‘for the purpose of preventing the unlawful entry of a person into PNG’. The Supreme Court also held to be invalid the exemption included in the PNG Constitution by the Constitution Amendment (No 37) (Citizenship) Law 2014 for detention ‘for the purposes of holding a foreign national under arrangements made by PNG with another country ...’ Specifically, the Court held that, in qualifying an existing constitutional right (the right to personal liberty), the amendment did not satisfy the further requirement in section 38 of the PNG Constitution, that it specify whether or not the detention of asylum seekers could be in the public interest and reasonably justifiable in a democratic society. The amending legislation neither specified the purpose of the amendment or the right which it purported to limit.

Commentary and analysis:

 

Plaintiff S99/2016 v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection [2016] FCA 483 (6 May 2016)
Justice Bromberg of the Federal Court of Australia held that the Minister has a duty of care to the applicant (a young African refugee who was raped on Nauru whilst unconscious and suffering a seizure) to exercise reasonable care to discharge the responsibility he assumed to procure for her a safe and lawful abortion. His Honour also held that the proposed abortion for the applicant in PNG was attended by safety and lawfulness risks that a reasonable person in the Minister’s position would have avoided. Thus, the procuring of the abortion by the Minister did not discharge his duty of care. In light of the fact that there was reasonable apprehension that the Minister would fail to discharge his duty of care, his Honour issued an injunction to preclude the Minister from procuring an abortion for the applicant in PNG but did not order the applicant be brought to Australia.

Commentary and analysis:

 

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