Two sides of the same coin: Contradictory legal and administrative practices towards children in immigration detention centres in Indonesia, Malaysia and Thailand
Two sides of the same coin: Contradictory legal and administrative practices towards children in immigration detention centres in Indonesia, Malaysia and Thailand
Date
2020
Authors
Yutthaworakool, Saittawut
Pokharel, Shraddha
Try, Sophea
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Global Campus of Human Rights
Abstract
The scale of migration among Asian countries has increased over
the decades. Children are also part of this migratory flow as they travel either
alone or with their parents. Since much of the migration occurs through
extra-legal routes, many migrants and their children face a multitude of legal
problems, including incarceration. The number of children deprived of liberty
for migration-related reasons in the Asia Pacific region has also increased over
the past few years. This study will look at Indonesia, Malaysia and Thailand,
as three of the most popular transit countries that routinely detain large
numbers of children in immigration detention centres. Despite the fact that
the Convention on the Rights of the Child (to which all three countries are
party) emphasises the fact that detention does not serve the best interests of the
child and, therefore, should only be used as a last resort and for the shortest
appropriate period of time (article 37(b)), children nevertheless are routinely
detained and then also for long periods of time. This is particularly problematic
when children are detained for migration-related reasons, since it never
serves the purpose of the best interests of the child (Nowak 2019). This study
examines immigration detention centres (IDCs) by analysing from a sociopolitical
perspective existing regulations and practices in the three countries
selected. Using secondary data, the study addresses two questions, namely,
(a) how existing legal and administrative practices of three Asia Pacific (transit/
destination) countries impact children in immigration detention centres; and
(b) why these countries fail to uphold international obligations regarding the
best interests of children in IDCs. The article argues that adverse administrative practices and the absence of domestic legal frameworks on children in IDCs
contradict numerous international obligations. Not only does this jeopardise
the survival and development of children, but it also creates barriers for
these children to access fundamental human rights, social justice and other
entitlements.
Key words: children; best interests; deprived of liberty; detention; immigration
law
Description
Keywords
children rights,
detained children,
migrations,
detention,
emigration and immigration law,
Indonesia,
Malaysia,
Thailand
Citation
S Try, S Pokharel & S Yutthaworakool ‘Two sides of the same coin: Contradictory legal and administrative
practices towards children in immigration detention centres in Indonesia, Malaysia and Thailand’ (2020)
4 Global Campus Human Rights Journal 285-310
http://dx.doi.org/10.25330/939