What happens when Serco breaches its multimillion dollar detention centre contract with the Department of Immigration and Citizenship? Well, we can’t tell you, because no one is obliged to say.
According to a wire story that appeared online last Wednesday evening, Serco has been slugged with a $4 million fine by DIAC for breaching its detention services contract. Last year, more than 80 asylum seekers broke out of Darwin detention centre and staged a protest on the side of the road — it’s believed this may be part of the reason for the DIAC fine.
But DIAC, the minister’s office and Serco have been a closed shop this week. When seeking more details about the fine, all three offices gave Crikey the same “commercial in confidence” cold shoulder. Crikey understands the abatements totalled $2 million in November and $2.5 million in December.
Serco’s detention centre contract with DIAC is worth more than $700 million. Much of the contract is shrouded in secrecy, with many details of what Serco is required to provide yet to see the light of day.
A DIAC spokesperson told Crikey they couldn’t confirm the fine, the amount or what it was for, because those details are “commercial in confidence”. All Crikey could ascertain was that there is a provision in the contract for DIAC to sanction its partner: “The contract between the department and the detention services provider has provisions that allow Serco to be financially sanctioned for failure to meet agreed service delivery standards.”
The minister’s office was also less than forthcoming. Details of the fine and the figure fall under the contractual agreement, a spokesperson for Minister Chris Bowen said, and to provide any more information would breach “commercial-in-confidence”.
Serco also would not provide any details on the fines. A spokesperson even took umbrage with that description — “they’re abatements, not fines” — and said any sanctions issued were part of an ongoing review of Serco’s performance.
“The contract between DIAC and Serco has provisions that allow Serco to be financially sanctioned for failure to meet agreed service delivery standards,” the spokesperson told Crikey. “We cannot go into detail on the total amount of any fines imposed as this information is considered commercial-in-confidence.”
The spokesperson said that the confidential contract between Serco and DIAC was “growing” and that it was “particularly complex”: “This long-standing practice to not disclose such details has been in place over successive detention service providers, and covers governments over many years.”
Pamela Curr, from the Asylum Seeker Resource Centre, says it’s likely the fines were handed down largely because of detainee breakouts. She says the real victims of these fines are the detainees, who are being supervised by staff fearful of their company being sanctioned.
“The government, in order to ensure they’re protected in the media from any escapes, impose punitive fines on the private contractor, who in turn impose punitive conditions on detainees,” Curr told Crikey.
Curr thinks there could also be a contract provision aimed at stopping the media from accessing detention centres.
“We hear a lot in the media about welfare checks,” she said. “They’re not welfare checks, they’re head checks. Officers will come in during the middle of the night and count the heads of children and their parents. This is in order to fulfill the daily head count and ensure no one has escaped.”
[Eva’s op ed was three words short of saying Feminism has Failed. ]
Maybe Eva was really saying…” as a supporter of woman I have failed.” …or failed to research her subject.
Journalists of Australia arise!
Test whether Serco is indeed required to keep you out and not report on the effects of mandatory detention on over 6000 civilians in immigration detention on Australian soil! The over 1000 children now detained deserve your intervention.
During the so called Pacific “Solution” (2001-2008) journalists had the excuse that Howard’s people had leant on the Nauruan Government never to issue visas to journalists. A few snuck in – the BBC and Kate Durham and a feisty young SBS reporter and the lass from NewZild and her terrified photographer who described the unforgettable encampment on the phosphate moonscape along Rubbish Tip Road where 45 Hazara men were on a hunger strike for almost a month.
But with Serco employing thousands on men and women in one of Australia’s growth industries, surely there are some whistlebloweres who are terrified and horrified by the damage being done to civilians deprived of their freedom? There must be some dreading the first successful suicide – a new sort of death in custody- and weeping about hopelessness and the self inflicted cuts of the despairing men in Curtin, Darwin, on Christmas Island , despairing about ever getting out, of having a furture worth having, of ever seeing their families again.
The unecessary mandatory detention of civilian asylum seekers in remote , punishing conditions, out of sight and out of the public mind, is worthy of a few media resources to bring us the truth and humanise asylum seekers and persuade out politicians we do not have to torture them after they land here. I want to see articles from “our correspondent in Curtin”.
Serco are now despatching guards direct from the UK to do the dirty business. they are having trouble recruiting in OZ- 12 hour shifts often blowing out to 22 hours in isolated places, sent off to the most deserted places in Orstralia and Off shore, Work shifts 2 days on, one day off 67 days on one off all over the place. low pay although the $100 per day allowances help in isolation posts but then it is so boring there that people just drink it so nothing to show for it.
SERCO sent 44 Guards from max security prison in UK direct to Christmas island to mix it with local recruits who have attended the DIAC Charm School in an effort to change the KULCHA which has proved so expensive in compensation payouts.
SERCO guards in Inverbrackie are ex Afghan war vets from UK who think working for SERCO is a breeze after slugging it out in Afghanistan in the British army.
The latest is a new manager at the MITA in Melbourne- the family friendly lock up for kids aged 14 to 18. He has introduced visiting requirements that make a visit to a prison look like a piece of cake. The Nuns who visit and support the kids are now regularly turned away on some pretext or other. There are now daily room searches just in case the kids think that they are not “criminals” and threats of sending them across to Maribyrnong if they put a foot out of line.