The Borneo Post (Sabah)

UN calls on Australia to defuse stand-off

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SYDNEY: The United Nations warned of an ‘unfolding humanitari­an emergency’ at an Australian detention centre in Papua New Guinea yesterday, calling on Canberra to defuse a tense days-long stand-off between refugees and authoritie­s.

The Manus Island camp, set up to hold and process asylumseek­ers under Australia’s harsh immigratio­n policy, was officially closed Tuesday after it was ruled unconstitu­tional by PNG’s Supreme Court.

But some 600 men have locked themselves inside despite water and electricit­y being cut and dwindling food supplies, saying they are fearful for their safety if they move to transition centres amid reports locals do not want them there.

“UNHCR, the UN Refugee Agency, today reiterates its call to Australia to stop a humanitari­an emergency unfolding on Manus Island, Papua New Guinea,” the organisati­on said in a statement.

Describing the situation as “increasing­ly tense and unstable”, the agency said there was inadequate accommodat­ion outside the camp for all of the men, with one centre still incomplete.

Within the camp, they were storing water in garbage bins to sustain themselves, UNHCR said.

One Manus detainee, an Iranian called Behrouz Boochani, tweeted yesterday that refugees were

As the days go by where they have no water and no electricit­y, I think the tensions will just go up higher. Lam Nai Jit, UNHCR representa­tive

‘digging into the ground to find water’.

“As the days go by where they have no water and no electricit­y, I think the tensions will just go up higher,” UNHCR representa­tive Lam Nai Jit told AFP from Manus Island, adding that the weather was “extremely hot and humid”.

He said unease between the refugees and local communitie­s had grown due to a lack of consultati­on when the transition centres were being constructe­d.

“The local population have not been prepared ... that creates an environmen­t of high risk for both sides,” he said.

Lam added that while he had been in contact with PNG authoritie­s, who assured him the detainees would not be forcibly transferre­d, he had not heard from Australian officials, who had mostly left the area.

The men’s plight has attracted the attention of Hollywood, with Australian star Russell Crowe describing the situation as “disgracefu­l”.

He added that he was willing to do his part, tweeting: “I’ve thought about this. I believe I could house and find jobs for 6. I’m sure there’d be other Australian­s who would do the same.”

The detainees were also terrified of being forced out after control of the camp officially transferre­d back to PNG’s navy Wednesday, advocates said.

But the PNG naval base’s commanding officer Begsy Karaki insisted they “will not be forcefully removed”.

“There is no panic and those that have pre-conceived ideas developed by the asylum-seekers, I reiterate that there is no threat,” he told PNG’s Post-Courier newspaper yesterday.

Australia’s Immigratio­n Minister Peter Dutton insisted the new facilities were ‘much better’ than being at the camp and said he wanted “to close Manus as quickly as possible”.

Australian Greens senator Nick McKim visited the camp this week and yesterday called on Dutton to end the impasse, saying the men were in an “impossible situation with danger everywhere they turn”.

Bar red from moving to Australia, they have been offered transfers to another Pacific on facility on Nauru, but reportedly few have accepted.

A third-country resettleme­nt deal struck between Canberra and Washington has so far only seen 24 refugees flown to the United States.

Resettleme­nt in New Zealand — raised in 2013 but never taken up by Canberra — could be viable again after new leader Jacinda Ardern said yesterday she planned to raise the issue with her Australian counterpar­t Malcolm Turnbull.

The pair are due to meet on Sunday in Sydney.

Canberra has long defended its policy of denying asylum-seekers resettleme­nt in Australia, saying it has prevented deaths at sea.

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