Australia’s use of hotels for immigration detention found to have ‘devastating’ health effects
At the time of the Australian Human Rights Commission's inspections, the longest continuous detention in a hotel was 634 days
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The Australian government's use of city hotels as ad hoc immigration detention centres - including confining people for nearly two years - has devastating impacts on people's mental and physical health", the Australian Human Rights Commission has found.
In a report published on Wednesday morning, the commission argued that the use of hotels to incarcerate people remained a regularised" part of Australia's immigration infrastructure, rather than a measure of last resort, even though the number of people detained - and the length of their detention - has steadily decreased.
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