'Please no more': Back in Biloela, Priya Nadesalingam calls for detention centre closures

Priya Nadesalingam is calling for an immediate end to Australia’s detention centre system.

Priya  Nadesalingam is seen thanking supporters while attending the Flourish Multicultural Festival in Biloela, Queensland, Saturday, June 11, 2022.The family of Tamil asylum seekers have returned to their home in the central Queensland town of Biloela af

Priya Nadesalingam is seen thanking supporters while attending the Flourish Multicultural Festival in Biloela, Queensland, Saturday, June 11, 2022. Source: AAP

Speaking exclusively with SBS Tamil after her family arrived back in the rural Queensland town of Biloela, Ms Nadesalingam called for all immigration detention centres to be closed.

“Please no more life in detention. It is not suitable for any human being,” she said.

"I went into detention as a healthy person and have come out as an unhealthy mother."

Her remarks came shortly before the stabbing death of a 32-year-old detainee at the Yongah Hill Immigration Detention Centre east of Perth on Wednesday at midnight.

Police said Homicide Squad detectives were investigating the death and two people were assisting with inquiries.

Tamil family
Priya and Nades Murugappan and daughters Tharunicaa, two, and Kopika, four. Source: Twitter
Ms Nadesalingam, and her husband Nades, arrived in Australia a decade ago as Tamil asylum seekers, and their daughters Kopika, 6, and Tharnicaa, 4, were born in Australia.

They had been in detention for more than four years, after the expiration of their temporary visas.

In 2018, Australian Border Force officials took the family to Melbourne immigration detention, and they were later sent to Christmas Island as they fought a legal battle to remain in Australia.

The family had been in community detention in Perth since last year.

There were no other asylum seekers at the Christmas Island centre during their detention – just herself, her husband, and their two children.

Ms Nadesalingam said the loneliness was very difficult for the family to bear.
"Biloela wants this family back," demonstrators said.
"Biloela wants this family back," demonstrators said. Source: SBS
Ms Nadesalingam said the family was lifted by their supporters and friends, though the news of the recent death of her father had taken a toll.

She had not had the chance to introduce her husband or her children to her father, she explained.

Fortunately, the news of the family being permitted to return to Biloela had come within days of her learning of her father’s passing.

She believes her father will continue to guide her from the celestial world.
Nadesalaingam family arrives at Thangool Aerodrome
The Nadesalaingam family arriving at Thangool Aerodrome, Friday June 11, 2022. Source: SBS Tamil
While the fanfare may be dying down in Biloela after their arrival back on June 10, the family is eagerly anticipating news from the Minister for Immigration, Andrew Giles, on granting them an appropriate visa to stay in the country indefinitely.

Ms Nadesalingam said the family's warm welcome in their hometown had restored their energy after an ordeal that saw them on the verge of deportation back to Sri Lanka.

During the recent federal election campaign, then Opposition leader, Anthony Albanese, made a promise to the “Home to Bilo” campaigners who were fighting to bring the family back to Biloela where Nades had worked in a meat factory.
Murugappan Family Returns To Biloela After Four Years In Immigration Detention
Kopika Murugappan and her father Nades at Flourish festival on June 11, 2022 in Biloela. Source: Dan Peled/Getty Images
On Saturday, the Biloela Civic Centre hosted the annual Flourish Festival and the family was given a warm welcome by an elder of the Gangalu people, Natalee Waterton.

On Wednesday, the family met Prime Minister Albanese, in Gladstone, where he assured them, they would be able to stay in Biloela “with certainty”.
Ms Nadesalingam said she wants her young daughters to grow up with proper values and be good citizens while Nades said he wants his children to give back to Australia.

As for their daughters, they both want to become medical practitioners, so that they can help heal the world, Ms Nadesalingam said.
She thanked the Biloela community that had fought to get the family back and the Tamil Refugee Council for their ongoing support.

Her message for those living with citizenship uncertainty is: “Don’t give up”.

“…fight for your rights without breaking any law.

“It is a tough fight, but never give up.”


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Priya Nadesalingam's exclusive interview to SBS Tamil:

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4 min read
Published 16 June 2022 6:44pm
Updated 16 June 2022 8:18pm
By Kulasegaram Sanchayan

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