Gulf News

Canberra told to accept New Zealand offer on refugees

Stalemate as refugees dig in at closed camp in Papua New Guinea

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The United Nations refugee agency yesterday urged Australia to accept New Zealand’s offer to resettle 150 refugees from an abandoned Australian-run detention centre in Papua New Guinea, as about 450 men remain barricaded inside without food or water.

The asylum seekers have been holed up inside the centre for the past two weeks defying attempts by Australia and Papua New Guinea to close the facility, saying they fear for their safety if moved to transit centres.

With many detainees complainin­g of illness bought about by the unsanitary conditions inside the camp, the UN High Commission­er for Refugees (UNHCR) urged Australia to allow 150 of them to resettle in New Zealand.

“We urge Australia to reconsider this and take up the offer,” Nai Jit Lam, deputy regional representa­tive at the UNHCR told Reuters. The asylum seekers are mainly from Afghanista­n, Iran, Myanmar, Pakistan, Sri Lanka and Syria.

Some 400 refugees rebuffed continued efforts by Papua New Guinea authoritie­s to convince them to move from a shuttered Australian detention camp Tuesday as the tense standoff over their future drags into a third week. The confrontat­ion has drawn global attention to Canberra’s tough immigratio­n policy, under which asylumseek­ers who try to reach Australia by boat are sent to remote Pacific camps on PNG’s Manus Island and the island nation of Nauru. Most of the 600 refugees detained at the camp refused to leave when Australia officially closed it on October 31 after the PNG Supreme Court ruled the site unconstitu­tional, citing fears for their safety outside. They are barred from resettling in Australia and Canberra has struggled to transfer them to third countries.

Kurdish-Iranian detainee and journalist Behrouz Boochani told AFP on Tuesday that the detainees were going to dig another well, a day after police moved into the camp to puncture or remove tanks holding the refugees’ remaining supplies of drinking water. “It’s the moment to accept failure & let us go to a 3rd country,” Boochani, who has acted as a spokesman for the refugees, added in a tweet yesterday.

Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull earlier this month rejected a refugee resettleme­nt offer from his New Zealand counterpar­t Jacinda Ardern, preferring instead to work through an existing refugee swap deal he negotiated with former US president Barack Obama last year. Under that deal, up to 1,250 asylum seekers detained by Australia in Papua New Guinea and Nauru in the South Pacific could be resettled in the United States in return for Australia accepting refugees from Central America.

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