Following today’s revelations that people overseeing Nauru deportations have made serious threats of physical violence against migrants and refugees, the Albanese Government must immediately halt all deportations and end its deal with Nauru, which threatens the lives and safety of hundreds.
Earlier today, Andrew Wilkie MP read a statement from a whistleblower in parliament, detailing their involvement in deportations to Nauru, and their firsthand exposure to threats of vigilante violence and extrajudicial punishment levelled against those deported to the country.
According to the testimony, senior figures responsible for the management of refugees and migrants deported to Nauru described them as “absolute [blank] pieces of [blank]” who would be greeted with vigilante violence to make it “very clear how they are going to be managed for the rest of their lives.”
As raised in parliament, the whistleblower claims that they are uncertain whether these senior figures were contracted by the Albanese Government, or the Government of Nauru with Australian funding.
Under its secretive deportation deal, the Albanese Government is attempting to permanently exile hundreds of people to Nauru on 30-year visas.
The deal has been plagued with controversy, with a whistleblower revealing in November 2025 the involvement of outlaw motorcycle gangs in the management of refugees in Nauru, and last week’s reports that the trust established to pay for the arrangement will be administered by the son of the President of Nauru, Damon Adeang.
The Government of Nauru recently legislated to appoint ‘community monitoring officers’ authorised to use force against deported migrants and refugees, providing official permission for the violence detailed by the whistleblower.
Twelve people have already been transferred to Nauru – including one man who is reliant on a wheelchair.
Hundreds more remain at risk of deportation.
Sanmati Verma, Legal Director at the Human Rights Law Centre, said:
“The Albanese Government is ripping people from their homes, away from their families in Australia, and deporting them to a country where it knows they face a lifetime of state-sanctioned violence.
The Albanese Government has consistently sought to hide from the consequences of sending people to Nauru – whether it is medical neglect, lifelong family separation or sponsoring violence with billions of taxpayer dollars.
As whistleblower testimony continues to pile up, it is time for the Albanese Government to account for what it is doing in our name, with our money – and answer to the families and communities it has brutalised with its deportation powers.”
Jana Favero, Deputy CEO of the Asylum Seeker Resource Centre said:
“Today’s allegations are shocking but not surprising – yet again whistleblowers are having to put themselves at risk, using parliamentary privilege to get this information out into the public eye. We already know that taxpayer money has been used to pay bikies – now we learn that contractors have made threats of physical violence towards people our Government has deported under their $2.5 billion dollar Nauru deal. This exposes taxpayers’ money is being used in ways that should shock all of us. It’s reckless, irresponsible and harmful.”















