Australian doctors Monday ramped up pressure on the government over its hardline policy on asylum-seekers, saying children they treat from immigration centers should not be returned to detention where conditions could harm them. Thousands of Australians rallied over the weekend urging Pacific island detention camps be shut, and medical professionals at the Royal Children's Hospital in Melbourne are reportedly refusing to discharge asylum-seeker patients if they are to be locked up again. The stance was backed by the Australian Medical Association (AMA) and the Royal Australasian College of Physicians (RACP). AMA president Brain Owler said children behind bars suffered psychologically and doctors faced an ethical dilemma. "Doctors are put in a very difficult position," he told national radio. "If we had a child that comes into our hospital that we feared if sending them back to an environment which we felt was going to be harmful, where they were at risk of abuse, we would be negligent if we sent them back to that environment. "And that is what the doctors at the Royal Children's Hospital are saying. We cannot send children back to an environment where they're going to be harmed." RACP president Nick Talley added in a statement that "time and again, the Australian public has seen inquiries and heard excuses for the wrongs committed against children inside these detention centres". "The health and well-being of children should never be open to compromise. No child should be held in detention," he said. All asylum-seekers coming by boat to Australia are now sent to camps in Papua New Guinea and Nauru and ultimately denied resettlement in Australia even if they are found to be genuine refugees. Although the tough policy, which also includes turning back boats, has stopped frequent drownings, human rights organisations have slammed the prolonged detention, particularly of children, as a breach of Australia's legal obligations. Canberra has also been accused of drawing a veil of secrecy over its treatment of asylum-seekers with new laws introduced this year criminalising the disclosure of information about boatpeople in its care, including by doctors.