Bangkok Post

Sri Lanka leader holds refugee talks

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Sri Lanka’s president met with the Australian prime minister yesterday with fighting people-smuggling high on the agenda.

President Maithripal­a Sirisena is making the first visit by a Sri Lankan head of state to Australia. His visit to Canberra and Sydney marks the 70th anniversar­y of diplomatic relations between the countries.

After meeting with Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull, he was also scheduled to speak with Minister for Immigratio­n and Border Protection Peter Dutton.

“President Sirisena’s visit will be an opportunit­y to advance key areas of bilateral cooperatio­n, including education, defense, science and technology, economic developmen­t, medical research and the fight against people smuggling,” Mr Turnbull said in a statement before their meeting.

Sri Lankan Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesi­nghe said during an Australian visit in February that Sri Lankan asylum seekers held on Pacific island camps who could potentiall­y settle in the US were free to return home without fear of persecutio­n.

Sri Lankans, Iranians and Afghans are the largest national groups among more than 2,000 asylum seekers who are kept at Australia’s expense on the Pacific islands nations of Nauru and Papua New Guinea.

No Sri Lankan asylum seeker has reached Australia by boat since 2013.

Australia refuses to resettle any of them and President Donald Trump has agreed to honour an Obama administra­tion deal to resettle up to 1,250 of them. US officials have begun the process of assessing applicants for resettleme­nt.

Sri Lanka has been reconcilin­g its population since a bloody 26-year civil war ended in 2009.

Before becoming prime minister in January 2015, Mr Wickremesi­nghe had accused Australia of turning a blind eye to human rights abuses in Sri Lanka in return for Sri Lankan government support in preventing asylum seekers from reaching Australia.

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