 The Naru Files is the largest case of leaked documents ever published from inside Australia's detention centre on Naru. They set out as never before an in staggering detail what has taken place including serious events of self harm, of abuse and assault. The Naru Files is really the view of what has taken place on Naru from the eyes of the guards and the case workers and the teachers on the island. The Naru Files was born out of a greater need for transparency and openness in Australia's offshore detention regime. The decision to publish the primary material is about creating open journalism that members of the public can view and explore and see and understand themselves. Nick Evershed, the Guardian's data and interactive editor in Australia, produced an incredible interactive demo series that's set out in very immense detail, the publication of all of those files. A Senate inquiry was launched into the continuing allegations of abuse and self harm and other serious events and recommended that Australia swiftened its arrangements to resettle the refugees on Naru. There were protests around the country, there was a bill put forward to introduce an independent children's advocate and there were calls from many international and domestic groups to remove the people from the detention centre on Naru and resettle them. So those were important changes and important audits that were done to evaluate and assess how people are being treated in offshore detention. The Naru Files put a real spotlight on that and that's why the coverage was so broad across the world.