New Straits Times

AUSTRALIA, PNG COMPROMISE ON ASYLUM CENTRE DEAL

PNG firm to take over asylum-seeker centres on Manus island

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AUSTRALIA has agreed to stop using a controvers­ial security contractor to run asylum-seeker centres in Papua New Guinea, which have been plagued by incidents of self-harm and attempted suicide.

Following demands by Papua New Guinea Prime Minister James Marape to take the lucrative contract away from Australian security firm Paladin, the two government­s agreed to transfer the work to local firms, officials said.

A joint statement issued on Wednesday said Paladin’s contract, which has been worth A$21 million (RM61 million) per month and was due to expire this week, would be extended only as long as it took Papua New Guinea to find qualified local firms to provide services to the asylum seekers on the country’s Manus Island.

“While procuremen­t processes take time, Australia will work with Papua New Guinea to transition to new service providers within the quickest possible time, at which time Australian held contracts will be terminated,” the statement said.

Paladin was given the contract without any competitiv­e tender in 2017 to provide housing and security for the asylum seekers, sent to Manus by Australia after trying to reach the country by boat.

At the time, the company was registered to a beach shack in Australia and had a post box in Singapore. The award is under investigat­ion by government auditors.

Despite controvers­y over the contract, the Home Ministry earlier this week said it intended to renew the deal with Paladin.

But following Marape’s protest, the compromise was agreed.

From 2012 to 2017, Australia ran detention camps on Manus under a hard-line policy of turning back anyone trying to arrive in the country by sea, including refugees fleeing wars and unrest as far afield as Sudan and Iran.

But after the Papua New Guinea Supreme Court ruled the arrangemen­t unconstitu­tional, Australia handed the camps over to local authoritie­s, with daily management of security and other operations given to Paladin.

Several thousand asylum seekers were sent to Manus and the Pacific island nation of Nauru under the tough immigratio­n policy. The 500 men still on Manus have been in the island camps for nearly six years.

Many of the refugees have been resettled, but those remaining on the remote islands have become increasing­ly desperate and the UN and human rights organisati­ons have been scathing about their treatment by Australia.

There has been a rash of suicide attempts and other incidents of self-harm among the Manus refugees since Australia’s conservati­ve government was re-elected to office in mid-May.

The opposition Labor party had been widely expected to win the vote, raising hopes among the asylum seekers of an easing of their plight.

...Australia will work with Papua New Guinea to transition to new service providers within the quickest possible time...

AUSTRALIA-PNG JOINT STATEMENT

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