The Guardian Australia

First refugees from Nauru to be resettled in New Zealand arrive nine years after deal offered

- Ben Doherty and Tess McClure

The first six refugees to be resettled in New Zealand from Australia’s offshore processing regime on Nauru have landed in Auckland.

The flight follows a resettleme­nt deal first offered by New Zealand nine years – and three prime ministers – ago when it proposed taking 150 refugees from Australia’s offshore centres every year.

On Tuesday, six men – four Rohingya men from Myanmar, one from Sudan and one from Cameroon – each of whom had been held on Nauru for more than eight years, flew to Auckland.

Australia’s home affairs minister, Clare O’Neil, confirmed the transfer.

“We confirm a flight left Nauru today destined for New Zealand with an initial 6 refugees on board. The Australian and New Zealand government­s continue to work together to resettle annually 150 refugees from Australia’s existing regional processing cohort.”

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A spokespers­on for New Zealand’s immigratio­n minister, Michael Wood, said: “We can confirm a flight left Nauru today destined for New Zealand with an initial 6 refugees on board. The Australian and New Zealand Government­s continue to work together to resettle 150 refugees annually from Australia’s existing regional processing cohort.”

There remain just under 100 people held on Nauru, and a similar number in Papua New Guinea where Australia’s former offshore processing centre was found to be illegal and forced shut.

A separate direct deal between PNG and New Zealand will allow for refugees previously held within Australia’s offshore centre on Manus Island to be resettled in New Zealand. That scheme has seen one Iranian man, his Papua New Guinean wife and their child resettled in New Zealand.

New Zealand, under prime minister John Key, first offered to take 150 refugees a year from Australia’s offshore detention centres in 2013, a deal that was accepted by the then Australian prime minister Julia Gillard.

No refugees were resettled before the Labor party lost government that year. While the deal remained, New Zealand insisted, “on the table”, it was never taken up by the Coalition government­s which followed.

The former prime minister Scott Morrison belatedly accepted the resettleme­nt offer in March 2022, just months before his government was defeated in May’s election.

Australia’s only “enduring” offshore detention centre – after the forced closure of Manus Island by the PNG supreme court – Nauru continues to attract significan­t controvers­y, particular­ly over the tenaciousl­y high cost of maintainin­g a detention facility that is currently empty.

The refugees held at present on the island live in the community: the detention centre remains on standby for new arrivals, but no asylum seekers have been sent offshore since 2014.

Ian Rintoul, a spokespers­on for the Refugee Action Coalition, said the resettleme­nt was “very welcome news”.

“It’s a long-awaited relief, but it’s been far, far too long. These people have been on that island eight, nine years, waiting. And while this is great for the six people who have gone today, there are people still waiting.”

Médecins Sans Frontières said in 2018 the mental health suffering on Nauru was “among the most severe MSF has ever seen”.

 ?? Photograph: Rémi Chauvin/The Guardian ?? The first refugees to be resettled from Nauru to New Zealand have arrived in Auckland.
Photograph: Rémi Chauvin/The Guardian The first refugees to be resettled from Nauru to New Zealand have arrived in Auckland.

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