Australia rejects Amnesty's torture claim on Nauru Published duration 18 October 2016

image copyright Getty Images image caption A demonstrators in Sydney earlier this month protest against Australia's detention centre on Nauru

Australia has rejected a human rights report comparing its asylum seeker camp on the Pacific island of Nauru to an open-air prison.

Australia transports asylum seekers who arrive by boat to off-shore processing centres in Nauru and Papua New Guinea.

An Amnesty International report said this was a "deliberate policy to inflict harm on refugees" and imposes conditions that "amount to torture".

Nauru has previously denied claims of abuse at the refugee centre.

Australia has been repeatedly criticised for its tough policy on refugees and asylum seekers.

It says the policy is necessary to discourage people risking their lives at sea to reach Australian territory.

'Unique notoriety'

In the report - titled Island of Despair - Amnesty alleged that many asylum seekers on Nauru have attempted suicide as a result of conditions in indefinite detention.

"The policy that the Australian government is selling to the world as a success is one that it has acknowledged to the public is cruel," it said.

"It has earned Australia unique notoriety as a country that will do everything it can to make sure refugees don't reach its shores and to punish people who dared to try."

Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull told the Australian Broadcasting Corp: "I reject that claim totally."

"It is absolutely false. The Australian government's commitment is compassionate and it's strong."

Approximately 750 people granted refugee status are living on Nauru with 10,000 locals.

The Nauruan government has not responded to the Amnesty report but has previously criticised an TV report that made similar allegations.

The report, by ABC's Four Corners programme, said refugee children were too afraid to attend schools on the island because of high levels of violence and sexual harassment from locals.

The Nauruan government the children had been coached and the filming "stage-managed".

ABC said the programme was "an important story, of obvious public interest".

In August, the Guardian newspaper published more than 2,000 leaked reports from the immigration centre on Nauru.

The "incident reports" revealed widespread abuse and trauma among children and women at the centre. The Australian government said many reports were "unconfirmed allegations".

Australia and asylum