The Phnom Penh Post

UN offers to help Australia resettle refugees in US

- Michelle Innis and Somini Sengupta

FOR years, the UN’s refugee agency told Australia that its policy of banishing asylum seekers to remote Pacific island detention centres was illegal.

Now, the agency is working with Australia in what both sides call an unusual, not-to-be-replicated agreement to send some of those refugees across the world, to be resettled in the United States.

The deal, announced by Australia two weeks ago, is aimed at shutting down two offshore detention facilities – one on the island nation of Nauru and the other on Manus Island in Papua New Guinea – where hundreds of people are housed in what rights groups describe as deplorable conditions. The United States has agreed to take some of them; how many, and how quickly, remains unclear.

In an interview this week,Volker Turk, an assistant high commission­er with the UN refugee agency, said his staff would help with the screening and resettleme­nt of refugees but only as a “one-off” to allay their suffering. “We think there is an urgent imperative to find a humanitari­an way out of this otherwise very, very, complex conundrum,” he said by telephone from Canberra.

His comments hinted at the dilemmas that the world body can face when countries flout internatio­nal law on the rights of people fleeing war and persecutio­n, as the UN and other critics say Australia has done.

“We do not in any way want to give the impression that we would continue supporting such types of mechanisms,” Turk said, referring to Australia’s offshore detention policy.

“We, all of us, are very clear that this is a one-off, good offices, exceptiona­l humanitari­an type of involvemen­t because we do not believe that the future of handling this lies in sending people to Manus Island and Nauru.”

Australia is the only country in the world that sends all seaborne asylum seekers to other countries, where their claims for refugee status are assessed, while refusing to let any of them settle within its borders. The policy is meant to discourage such migrants, many of whose voyages have ended in disaster after people smugglers pushed them out to sea from Indonesian ports, crowded onto unseaworth­y vessels.

Many of the offshore detainees are from Iran, others from Afghanista­n, Malaysia, Sri Lanka and Vietnam. The government is considerin­g legislatio­n that would bar them from ever visiting Australia, regardless of where they settle. Australia has turned back boats full of migrants and towed them out to sea; assessed their asylum claims on boats, apparently in violation of internatio­nal law, before forcing them back; and has even been accused of paying a human trafficker to take his passengers back to Indonesia, where he was arrested.

Australia pays Nauru and Papua New Guinea, both impoverish­ed nations, to house the detainees. But Papua New Guinea recently said it would close the camp there, which its Supreme Court found to be in violation of its constituti­on. Internatio­nal rights groups, the UN and domestic critics have excoriated Australian officials for years over the bleak conditions in which the asylum seekers live.

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