Arab Times

Australia eyes workers, patrols:

Asia

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Australia will extend its Pacific Islands migrant labour program and fly aerial surveillan­ce missions to protect valuable Pacific fisheries, Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull said at the Pacific Island Leaders Forum.

The meeting, held in Apia, Samoa, brought 17 Pacific Island nations plus Australia and New Zealand to the negotiatin­g table.

The new agreement helps tiny low-income Pacific Island nations by giving them access to Australia’s large and developed economy, with migrant workers repatriati­ng funds via overseas remittance­s.

The per capita gross national incomes of 11 countries in the region range from $1,540 for the Solomon Islands to $13,496 for Palau, according to World Bank figures, while Australian workers earn an average yearly salary of more than $64,000.

Australia’s population of 24 million people is highly urbanised, leading to labor shortages in rural areas.

Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull signed an agreement on Friday to allow 2,000 Islanders to work in rural areas over the next three years, adding to an existing seasonal worker program which supplies agricultur­al labor.

The micro-nations of Kiribati, Nauru and Tuvalu will have first access to the scheme, which will allow workers to engage in nonfarm work such as care of the elderly.

The World Bank said it was in Australia’s interests to encourage stability.

“Aid dependency in the region is high, and reliance on aid alone is an unbalanced strategy. By improving employment prospects and increasing remittance flows, labor mobility helps stabilize otherwise fragile states,” it said in a new report, Pacific Possible, released at the forum. (RTRS)

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