Asylum Seekers - File photo |
By Australian
Associated Press
Asylum seekers brought to the Australian mainland will seek compensation
after being detained at sea for three weeks.
The 157 asylum seekers including 50 children, who were detained on a
Customs ship, are now at the Curtin detention centre in Western Australia after
being flown from Cocos Island on Sunday.
In a directions hearing on Monday, Justice Kenneth Hayne allowed lawyers
for the asylum seekers to adjust their statement of claim to one of false
imprisonment, with an application for compensation.
A High Court hearing to determine if the government had the power to
intercept their boat and transport them somewhere other than Australia will now
not be scheduled for next week.
Human rights lawyer and spokesman for the asylum seekers' legal team Hugh
de Kretser said the case would still proceed, but on a more normal timeline.
"The main case which tests the legality of the government's actions
- whether it was legal or not to take these asylum seekers away from Australia,
detain them at sea for a month - remains," Mr de Kretser told reporters
outside court.
He said the case was now about two things: was it illegal for the
government to take people away from Australia and detain them for a month at
sea and if so, should the asylum seekers receive compensation for that?
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