The core facts are as follows:
The riots resulted in one confirmed death (Reza Berati, a 23-year-old Iranian asylum seeker) and approximately 60-77 injuries [1][2].
Berati died of heart failure while being treated by medical staff at an emergency triage centre on a wharf after being struck from behind, kicked, and having a rock dropped on his head [2].
Regarding medical treatment provided: Two asylum seekers were flown to Australia for treatment - one for a fractured skull and another for a gunshot wound [3].
The Senate Legal and Constitutional Affairs References Committee later recommended that "the Australian Government ensure that all asylum seekers injured in the violence at the Manus Island Regional Processing Centre from 16 to 18 February 2014 receive adequate professional assistance, including medical treatment, full rehabilitation and mental health services, as well as independent legal advice" [4].
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This recommendation implies that the medical response may have been insufficient.
The Cornall report and other investigations found that the violence involved multiple parties: G4S security contractors, PNG police mobile squad members, Salvation Army workers (one of whom allegedly led the fatal attack on Mr.
The claim omits several critical pieces of context:
**Labor Government's foundational role**: The Manus Island detention centre was reopened in November 2012 by the Labor Gillard government, not the Coalition [6].
Furthermore, in July 2013 (just months before the Coalition won government), Prime Minister Kevin Rudd announced the "PNG Solution" - a policy declaring that asylum seekers arriving by boat would never be settled in Australia and would instead be processed and resettled in Papua New Guinea [7][8].
**Causal link to Labor's policy**: The Cornall report explicitly states that the riots were triggered by asylum seekers' "anger and frustration" at being informed they would never be resettled in Australia under the permanent resettlement plan established by the former Labor government [2].
The report states: "The transferees' frustration and anger following that meeting resulted in disruption and violence" [2].
**Coalition had just taken office**: The riots occurred in February 2014, approximately five months after the Abbott government took office in September 2013.
The Coalition inherited an operational detention facility with pre-existing tensions and an explosive policy environment created by Labor's "no settlement in Australia" announcement [2][7].
**Security upgrade delays**: Immigration Minister Scott Morrison acknowledged that he had authorized security upgrades late in 2013 but was advised it would take four months to complete due to the remote location - the work was not finished before the riots occurred [2].
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**Did Labor do something similar?**
Search conducted: "Labor government offshore detention Manus Island asylum seekers Kevin Rudd 2012 2013 policy"
Finding: Yes - Labor not only did something similar but actually **established the foundational policy framework** that directly led to the incident:
1. **Labor reopened Manus Island**: The Manus Island Regional Processing Centre was reopened in November 2012 under Prime Minister Julia Gillard [6][10].
It had originally been opened under the Howard government's "Pacific Solution" in 2001 and closed by Kevin Rudd in 2008 [10].
2. **Labor created the "PNG Solution"**: On July 19, 2013, Prime Minister Kevin Rudd announced that "asylum seekers who come here by boat without a visa will never be settled in Australia" [7][8].
This Regional Resettlement Arrangement with Papua New Guinea meant that even those determined to be genuine refugees would be resettled in PNG rather than Australia [8].
3. **Labor's policy directly caused the riots**: The Cornall report explicitly attributes the cause of the February 2014 riots to "anger and frustration" at this Labor policy.
When asylum seekers were informed in February 2014 that they would never be resettled in Australia under the permanent resettlement plan, this triggered the violence [2].
4. **Both parties maintained offshore detention**: Both Labor and Coalition governments continued offshore detention policies.
When Labor's immigration spokesman Richard Marles criticized the Coalition's handling of Manus Island in 2014, he maintained support for the facility itself, stating: "I can't stress enough how important the Manus Island detention facility is to Australia's strategy" [3].
**Comparison**: Labor established the policy framework, reopened the facility, and created the conditions that led to the violence.
Both parties have maintained offshore detention as bipartisan policy, with Labor being the architect of the specific "no settlement in Australia" policy that triggered the February 2014 violence.
The claim highlights genuine concerns about medical treatment adequacy following the Manus Island riots, and the Senate inquiry's recommendation for "adequate professional assistance" suggests there were legitimate shortcomings [4].
However, the full story requires acknowledging:
**Complexity of the violence**: The characterization of "locals invading the camp" oversimplifies a multi-party conflict involving G4S security contractors (some of whom allegedly attacked asylum seekers), PNG police, Salvation Army workers (one allegedly leading the fatal attack), and asylum seekers who had breached compound walls [2][5].
**Labor's foundational responsibility**: The policy that directly caused the riots - the permanent resettlement arrangement meaning no asylum seeker would ever settle in Australia - was a Labor policy announced by Kevin Rudd in July 2013 [7][8].
The Cornall report explicitly identifies this as the root cause of the frustration that led to violence [2].
**Coalition inherited an explosive situation**: The Abbott government took office in September 2013 and the riots occurred in February 2014.
Immigration Minister Scott Morrison acknowledged that security upgrades had been ordered but could not be completed in time due to the remote location [2].
**Bipartisan continuity**: Despite criticizing the Coalition's handling of the incident, Labor's immigration spokesman Richard Marles maintained support for the Manus Island facility as "the single piece of public policy which has made the biggest difference in seeing an end to the number of boats coming from Indonesia" [3].
This reflects bipartisan support for offshore detention as a policy framework.
**Medical treatment**: While some asylum seekers were evacuated to Australia for serious injuries (fractured skull, gunshot wound) [3], the Senate committee's subsequent recommendation for "adequate professional assistance, including medical treatment, full rehabilitation and mental health services" [4] suggests the response may have fallen short of what was needed.
**Key context**: This incident cannot be understood in isolation from Labor's decision to reopen Manus Island in 2012 and implement the "PNG Solution" in 2013 - policies that created the conditions for the violence.
Both major Australian political parties have supported and maintained offshore detention policies, with Labor being the architect of the specific policy framework that triggered the February 2014 riots.
The claim has a factual basis: there were legitimate concerns about the adequacy of medical treatment following the Manus Island riots, as evidenced by the Senate committee's subsequent recommendation that injured asylum seekers receive "adequate professional assistance, including medical treatment, full rehabilitation and mental health services" [4].
However, the claim is misleading in several important respects:
1. **Mischaracterizes the violence**: The description of "locals invading the camp" oversimplifies a complex multi-party conflict involving security contractors, police, Salvation Army workers, and asylum seekers [2][5].
2. **Omits Labor's foundational role**: The Manus Island facility was reopened by Labor in 2012, and the riots were directly caused by frustration at Labor's "PNG Solution" policy announced in July 2013 that asylum seekers would never be resettled in Australia [2][7][8].
3. **Ignores inherited context**: The Coalition had been in government for only five months when the riots occurred, inheriting both the facility and the explosive policy environment from Labor [2].
4. **Bipartisan policy**: Offshore detention was and remains bipartisan policy, with Labor being the architect of the specific policy framework that caused the violence [3][7][8].
The claim presents a criticism of Coalition management while omitting that Labor created the policy framework, reopened the facility, and implemented the specific resettlement policy that directly triggered the violence.
The claim has a factual basis: there were legitimate concerns about the adequacy of medical treatment following the Manus Island riots, as evidenced by the Senate committee's subsequent recommendation that injured asylum seekers receive "adequate professional assistance, including medical treatment, full rehabilitation and mental health services" [4].
However, the claim is misleading in several important respects:
1. **Mischaracterizes the violence**: The description of "locals invading the camp" oversimplifies a complex multi-party conflict involving security contractors, police, Salvation Army workers, and asylum seekers [2][5].
2. **Omits Labor's foundational role**: The Manus Island facility was reopened by Labor in 2012, and the riots were directly caused by frustration at Labor's "PNG Solution" policy announced in July 2013 that asylum seekers would never be resettled in Australia [2][7][8].
3. **Ignores inherited context**: The Coalition had been in government for only five months when the riots occurred, inheriting both the facility and the explosive policy environment from Labor [2].
4. **Bipartisan policy**: Offshore detention was and remains bipartisan policy, with Labor being the architect of the specific policy framework that caused the violence [3][7][8].
The claim presents a criticism of Coalition management while omitting that Labor created the policy framework, reopened the facility, and implemented the specific resettlement policy that directly triggered the violence.