Aussie-US deal in the balance?
> American officials abruptly leaves Nauru refugee camp
SYDNEY: The abrupt departure of American officials from an Australian Pacific island refugee camp has fanned fears among asylum-seekers that plans to resettle them in the US may not go ahead, an activist group said yesterday.
Canberra sends asylum-seekers who try to enter Australia by boat to camps on Nauru and Papua New Guinea’s Manus Island, but the conditions there have been criticised by refugee advocates.
The Australian government struck a deal with Washington under former president Barack Obama to resettle some of those refugees in the US. But doubts over the arrangement have persisted after President Donald Trump this year reportedly lambasted his Australian counterpart Malcolm Turnbull during a phone call and attacked it as a “dumb deal”, before agreeing to go ahead with the proposal.
US Department of Homeland Security officials had been assessing the asylumseekers at Nauru as part of the arrangement when they abruptly left the island on Friday and Saturday, a Refugee Action Coalition spokesman said, days after the US passed its annual 50,000-refugee intake cap.
“They’ve (the DHS officials) given the people on Nauru no indication that they are coming back,” spokesman Ian Rintoul said.
About 200 refugees on Nauru have undergone interviews and medical checkups, while on Manus, some 70 had been through a similar process, he said.
“People are becoming increasingly doubtful that there is any deal”, he added.
Australian Foreign Minister Julie Bishop said yesterday she was confident the deal was still in place, adding that the “matter is progressing as we expected”.
“We have been given assurances by President Trump and Vice-President Michael Pence and others, that the agreement will be adhered to,” Bishop told the Australian Broadcasting Corporation.
“And the (refugee cap) quota will roll over again on Oct 1.”
The situation is particularly acute on Manus, with the camp set to close by October after a PNG Supreme Court declared holding people there as unconstitutional.
“News like this makes us feel dead. It defuses the spark of hope that we try to hold on to,” Manus refugee detainee Imran Mohammad, from Myanmar, said in a statement yesterday via Australia’s Human Rights Law Centre. – AFP