Australians would be shocked to learn about the plight of people detained in hotels under Australia’s immigration system
The plight of people detained in hotels under Australia’s immigration system usually goes unnoticed, though it would probably shock most Australians. Last year, when I inspected one such hotel and interviewed people who had been detained in hotels in Melbourne and Brisbane, I knew what to expect but found it confronting nonetheless.
The first thing that struck me was the proximity. Other guests stayed in the same hotel, coming and going without ever realising they shared the place with people who were imprisoned – who looked out their windows as the world went by in the city centre but were unable to join it. The invisibility of detainees within hotels themselves emphasised their political invisibility.
Sign up for a weekly email featuring our best reads
More Stories
Trump considers declaring national economic emergency to impose tariffs
Brazil says Meta getting rid of factcheckers is ‘bad for democracy’
Rachel Reeves heads to China to build bridges, but a new golden era of relations is impossible