Hundreds of people being held at an immigrant detention centre in Australia have gone on hunger strike in a protest against their living conditions, detainees and activists told AFP Wednesday.
More than 200 detainees held at the Melbourne Immigration Transit Accommodation are refusing to eat until the government agrees to improve the facilities.
Iraqi detainee Ali Yousuf said the group began the protest on Tuesday and has a string of demands -- from the provision of "proper chairs and tables to do paperwork" to the freedom to venture outdoors after midnight without a guard.
"I (have) never seen any detention centre like this before," said the 30-year-old, who fled Iraq after it became known he worked for disgraced US military contractor Blackwater as an interpreter.
The Australian government and SERCO -- a private contractor which staffs the facility -- did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
The detainees expect to meet government officials on Thursday to try to resolve the dispute.
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Hunger strikes are a frequent occurrence at Australia's onshore detention facilities, which house people who have run afoul of immigration law.
Last year hundreds of detainees at a centre in Sydney went on hunger strike against strict visitation rules.
Detainees have also used short-lived strikes to garner media coverage and put pressure on Australia's conservative government to close the facilities.
The government denies mistreatment, but has pledged a "ramping-down" of the country's "onshore immigration detention network."
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