Bangkok Post

Turnbull says refugees to be sent to US

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SYDNEY: Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull said yesterday the first group of about 50 men and women held in two controvers­ial detention centres for asylumseek­ers on remote Pacific islands will be resettled in the United States within weeks.

The comments mark the first official timetable for when the United States will begin resettling up to 1,250 people held in Australian-run centres on Nauru and Papua New Guinea’s Manus island as part of a refugee swap deal struck by former US President Barack Obama late last year.

Australia will begin resettling several dozen Central American refugees within weeks under the deal that US President Donald Trump has described as “dumb” but has neverthele­ss said Washington will honour.

“There will be about 25 from both Manus and Nauru going to the United States and I just want to thank again President Trump for continuing with that arrangemen­t,” Mr Turnbull said in a video statement.

Three sources familiar with the process said about 25 men from countries such as Bangladesh, Sudan, and Rohingya Muslims from Myanmar held on Manus island were the first to be told yesterday, with a similar number on Nauru to be told today.

One Sudanese refugee approved for resettleme­nt said he would leave Manus Island in a few days.

“It feels like my dreams are coming true. All we want is to go to a safe country,” said the refugee, who declined to be identified for fear of jeopardisi­ng the resettleme­nt.

While Mr Trump has said he would honour the swap agreement, concerns remain about how many asylum-seekers will be resettled from the Australian­run centres.

Nearly 2,000 men, women and children are held on Manus island and Nauru. The majority of whom have been awarded refugee status by the two South Pacific countries.

Refugees and advocates cautioned against assuming the US would take the full allotment, with its processing so far concentrat­ed on individual­s with applicatio­ns that are both easier to verify through background checks and originate from citizens of nations with closer ties to the United States.

“Iranians are about a third of the refugees on Manus but are only about 10% of the ones interviewe­d so far,” said Ian Rintol, spokesman for the Refugee Action Coalition. “It seems there had been some discrimina­tory selection.”

US-Iran relations have been strained under Mr Trump, who called Tehran a “rogue nation” on Tuesday. As the two have no diplomatic ties, validating refugee claims is prohibitiv­e.

Representa­tives of Australia’s immigratio­n minister, Peter Dutton, refused to comment.

Despite their refugee status, many of those on Nauru and Manus island have been held for four years in conditions widely criticised by the United Nations and human rights groups.

Australia is under increased pressure to resettle asylum-seekers from Manus Island because that centre is due to close on Oct 31. Australia would need to make alternativ­e arrangemen­ts should the bulk of the 800 men still be on the island.

 ?? AFP ?? An undated photo obtained from the Refugee Action Coalition shows a man at Australia’s regional processing centre on Manus Island in Papua New Guinea.
AFP An undated photo obtained from the Refugee Action Coalition shows a man at Australia’s regional processing centre on Manus Island in Papua New Guinea.

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