Tamil refugee family held on Christmas Island for 19 months while the government tries to deport them are depressed and lonely as they fight to stay in Australia
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A family of Tamil asylum-seekers removed from the Queensland town of Biloela three years ago are ‘struggling and coping’ in immigration detention.
Priya and Nades Murugappan and their two young daughters have been held on Christmas Island since August 2019 as the government tries to deport them to Sri Lanka, despite a community campaign to let them stay.
Labor senator Kristina Keneally is among those who have spent years calling for the family to be released.
Senator Keneally has spent the past four days with the family, who have been detained for more than 1,000 days.
Priya and Nades Murugappan and their two young daughters (pictured) are being detained in a demountable building on Christmas Island at a cost of $4,000 a day
Kopika (left) gets taken to school by guards while Priya stays inside to look after three-year-old Tharunicaa (right)
‘They are struggling and coping, as you can imagine, particularly these young girls,’ she told ABC radio from Christmas Island.
Senator Keneally said Priya was clearly lonely and depressed in detention.
‘Nades, the father, is the quieter of the two but I sensed a deep and profound sadness in his face,’ she said.
‘He is stuck in a situation he cannot resolve. He can’t work, he can’t look after his family, and he can’t get a way out.’
Senator Keneally said Nades genuinely feared being killed if he was deported to Sri Lanka.
‘He just wants to care for his wife and children, and he doesn’t want to make his daughters orphans.’
Figures released last year showed the government has spent more than $6million detaining the family. Pictured: Priya and Nades
Tharunicaa (pictured) was just a few months old when her family was arrested and has spent the vast majority of her life locked up by the Australian Government
Their two Australian-born girls, Kopika and Tharunicaa, are happy when they are allowed to attend school or visit a recreation centre once a week.
‘But back in detention they are, Priya says, they are dead, they have no joy,’ Senator Keneally said.
‘These two parents both look at their most overwhelmed when they are talking about the impacts of detention on their children.’
The family has access to health and welfare services on Christmas Island, including school and recreation services.
Three years ago: While on bridging visas, the family rented a small house, paid for with money Nades earned by working at an abattoir
Priya and Nades met in Sydney before getting married and settling in Biloela, Queensland where they had two children
But the girls are the only two children housed in an immigration detention centre in Australia.
Senator Keneally called on Karen Andrews, who was recently promoted to the home affairs ministry, to intervene.
She wants the family to return to their adopted home of Biloela in central Queensland.
At the very least, Senator Keneally wants them to be able to live in community detention on Christmas Island while their case goes through the courts.
The family are not allowed to visit friends on the island and must get approval to go to a playground where they are accompanied by guards