Jakarta Globe – AFP, Sep 25, 2014
Sydney.
Australia confirmed on Thursday it will sign an asylum-seeker resettlement deal
with Cambodia in a move slammed by human rights groups as violating the
country’s international obligations.
Immigration
Minister Scott Morrison will be in Phnom Penh on Friday to seal the deal, which
could see some asylum-seekers currently held in offshore detention camps by
Australia transferred to the Southeast Asian nation.
The
agreement came as the Australian government tabled a bill in parliament to
reintroduce temporary visas for other asylum-seekers currently held on
Christmas Island, an Australian territory in the Indian Ocean, or in mainland
facilities.
The bill
also removes direct references to the UN Refugee Convention from the Migration
Act, replacing it with an Australian interpretation of the nation’s protection
obligations.
Morrison said
the Cambodia arrangement would be “strictly voluntary” for refugees and the
resettlement would be permanent.
“The
arrangement is strictly voluntary,” he said at a press conference. “Anyone who
chooses to go to Cambodia will have chosen themselves to go to Cambodia.”
Morrison
said those who went to Cambodia would be given support “designed to make them
self-reliant as quickly as possible”.
“They will
be afforded all the same rights under Cambodian law and those that exist under
the Refugee Convention and there is no cap on what has been discussed here.”
The
minister did not provide further details about the nature of the measures, how
many refugees could be transferred and how much Cambodia would be paid under
the deal.
Human
Rights Watch said the arrangement placed refugees at risk and Australia “will
be failing to meet the terms of its agreement because Cambodia is not a safe
third country”.
“Although
Cambodia is a party to the 1951 Refugee Convention, it has failed to protect
refugees and asylum-seekers, returning them to countries where they faced
persecution,” it said.
The United
Nations Human Rights Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) has also previously
criticized the plans but was not immediately available for comment Thursday.
The
temporary visa arrangements, when passed by parliament, would help clear the
backlog of asylum-seekers who arrived in Australia by boat last year, Morrison
said.
About 1,550
potential refugees, including 436 children and their families and 32
unaccompanied minors, could be eligible for the visas, which range between
three to five years.
Under
Canberra’s immigration policy, boatpeople arriving since July 2013 have been
sent to camps on Manus Island in Papua New Guinea and the remote Pacific state
of Nauru.
They are
resettled in those countries if their refugee claims are approved.
Morrison
said the new temporary visas would not apply to asylum-seekers held on Nauru or
Manus Island.
Only one
boatload of asylum-seekers has reached the Australian mainland since December,
compared to almost daily arrivals previously under the Labor administration,
with hundreds of people dying en route.
Agence France-Presse
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