Nauru Government Condemns Mentally Traumatized Individuals to Life-long Anguish

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The Government of Nauru, the small Pacific island State, has expelled the medical and psychological personnel of the international non-governmental organization Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) on Sunday 7 October.  The Government gave no explanation for its actions, but relations with the NGO have been difficult in the 11 months that MSF has been working there.  It is likely that the Government feared international attention to the prison-like conditions in which refugees and asylum seekers were kept.

The Australian Government in 2013 created camps on Nauru to house asylum seekers who were trying to reach Australia by boat. Nauru uses Australian  money a its national currency, receives the bulk of its financing as aid from the Australian Government and the bulk of its products come from Australia. Thus refusing orders from Australia is difficult.

Currently, there are some 900 refugees on Nauru, of which 100 are children, in different camps which have been described as “open-air prisons”.  Children are often kept separately from their parents. The MSF has been providing mental health care, as there are no independent psychological services on the island.  Many refugees suffer from depression and a feeling of hopelessness.  78 people have attempted suicide.  Individuals have suffered trauma in their home country and during the sea journey.  This is particularly true of children and young adults.

As president of an international child welfare NGO, I was responsible for mental health efforts for traumatized children and youth in Cambodia and Croatia suffering from the impact of war and in Bangladesh  suffering from the loss of homes and families due to natural catastrophes (flooding). Sever cases of childhood psychosis may require long-term psychotherapy. Often freauent and severe language disturbances are observed. In the absence of adequate care an psychotherapy, these children can become mentally deficient, unable to perform their duties as adults.

With early and adequate psychological care, some of the challenges can be met.  Children display an extraordinary need for contact and relate warmly to therapists.  If the therapist is taken away, the child has a deep sense of loss, a sense of loss already there from having had to flee his home conditions.

There is an urgent need for early psycho-social care. The term “psycho-social” underlines the close relationship between the psychological and social impact of refugee flight. By psychological effects we mean those experiences which affact emotions, thoughts, memory, learning and how a situation may be understood.  Bysocial effects we mean how experiences alter people’s relationships to each other.  The psycho-social impact must be assessed as soon as possible in order to develop effective programming.

The action of the Nauru Government in practice condemns the traumatized young to life-long anguish and other disabilities.  MSF has called for the immediate evacuation of all refugees from Nauru, but for the moment, the Australian officials refuse to accept the refugees saying that evacuation would create a flow of new refugees.

Obviously, conditions of stability and economic opportunity need to be created in the States from which the refugees have fled.  However, there is a short-term need for a return of the MSF team to Nauru and the creation of programs of mental health care.

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Rene Wadlow, President, Association of World Citizens

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