Refugee Island
How a tiny Pacific Island became a limbo for asylum seekers
In 2001, boats carrying hundreds of, mainly Afghan, refugees arrived on the tiny Pacific island of Nauru. This marked the beginning of the 鈥淧acific Solution鈥 鈥 a policy by the Australian government to establish offshore centres for processing asylum claims. The policy was intended to act as a deterrent, discouraging people from travelling to Australia. Many of the refugees lived in the cramped conditions of Nauru for years.
In this Witness History, Josephine Casserly speaks to Yahya, an Afghan refugee who left his home country as a school student when the Taliban gained control of his local area. Yahya was one of the first refugees to arrive at Nauru鈥檚 detention centre. Like many, he was hopeful that his stay in the makeshift camp would be a temporary measure, and he鈥檇 be quickly resettled in Australia. But that was not to be.
(Asylum seekers on their first day in the compound at Nauru after their long voyage, Sept 2001. Credit: Angela Whylie/Getty images)
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Witness History
History as told by the people who were there