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Danish MPs to visit Australia's Nauru migrant camp

AFP/The Local
AFP/The Local - [email protected]
Danish MPs to visit Australia's Nauru migrant camp
Johanne Schmidt-Nielsen said she'd use the trip as a fact-finding mission on Australia's "grotesque" system. Photo: MARIE HALD/Scanpix

Danish lawmakers will travel to the Pacific island of Nauru to visit a controversial Australian immigration centre and study the use of offshore settlements for asylum-seekers, one of the MPs said on Tuesday.

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Six members of the Danish parliament's Immigration and Integration Affairs Committee will leave on Saturday for Australia and Nauru, Johanne Schmidt-Nielsen of the leftist Red-Green Alliance (Enhedslisten) told AFP, confirming reports in Danish media.
 
Schmidt-Nielsen said that although she found the Australian system "grotesque", the trip -- planned for several months -- was a chance for her to "ask some of the questions that the Australian government is preventing journalists from asking."
 
The release of more than 2,000 leaked reports of incidents on Nauru detailing allegations of widespread abuse and self-harm, including children wanting to kill themselves, have renewed calls for a parliamentary inquiry in Australia.
 
But the Nauruan government said last week that asylum-seekers had made up most of the claims in hope of being relocated to Australia.
 
Under Canberra's immigration policy, asylum-seekers who try to reach Australia by boat are turned back or sent to detention centres in other countries, Nauru and Papua New Guinea
 
The chairman of the Danish parliamentary committee, Martin Henriksen of the anti-immigration Danish People's Party (DF), has previously described the Australian policy as being "very sensible".
 
The ruling Venstre party's hardline integration minister, Inger Støjberg, is not on the committee, but has said that the Australian system "apparently works in an Australian context" and that her government would "continually consider... experiences from other countries."
 
The Australian government said on August 17th that it had agreed to close the Papua New Guinea camp.
 
The Guardian, which published the Nauru reports, said that only two Australian journalists had been granted access to the Nauru detention centre in the past three years.
 
The Danish government rules with the help of the anti-immigration DF in parliament and has passed tough legislation to deter migrants from coming to the country, including allowing police to confiscate some of the asylum seekers' valuables to help pay for their accommodation.

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