Manus Island
Manu IslandManu's island from above, natives on the shore, natives on a small ferry, thick wood. Partially for anxiety of being attacked - a common issue in a city characterized by low employment and high levels of alcoholism - but mainly because of depressed people. Two-hundred men have already set off for America, and the trial has been met with enthusiasm among the migrants.
Lorengau, the Manus capitol, an Irish-style sanctuary embracing one of the locals' kids, an Afghans fugitive waiting for a coach, Behrouz Boochani is standing in front of the navy station where he and the other fugitives were imprisoned for the first three years, the huts where shelters are. Zahirian, leaving everything behind when he escaped Iran, spoke to his boy in Iran via smart phone, looked at the oceans, at the regional clinic in Lorengau.
The journalist Behrouz Boochani, a fellow countryman, disagrees. Ranchani is lighting a hand-rolled smoke. Bochani on one of the small yachts around the island, Behrouz Boochani (front left) and Ari Sirwan (in the foreground), on a boat ride to a neighboring island for swimming. Approximately 800 people will stay on Manus and Nauru after the end of the US-settlement.
However, the off-shore prison policies will still make a splash long after these men, woman and child from the island have been relocated. Barnard College New York attorney and human rights expert JC Salyer, who recently worked in the field around the Manus Center, says the increasing frustration over Australia's policies has opened the door to greater China involvement in the state.
Born in Parachinar, a city in Pakistan that has been plagued by cultist abuse for years, Shabbir Hossein has been on the island since 2013, leaving behind a 17-month-old girl. It is a run-down room that once accommodated fugitives, Lorengau, the capitol of Manus. AI Sirwan, 26 comes from a city named Sirwan.
A lot of mannerists feel sorry for the men who are trapped in their middle. The fisherman Robin Marakei constructed a guest house on his small island to give the escapees a place to relax. Agua Joe met the fugitives in prison. Last November, he was significantly involved in trafficking goods into the old warehouse when refusals were made by fugitives and the government stopped the flow of supplies of food, drink and power.