The Borneo Post

Australia, Cambodia sign new asylum-seeker deal

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SYDNEY: Australia and Cambodia yesterday sealed a second deal on immigratio­n cooperatio­n, vowing to tackle the ‘growing security threat’ of asylum- seeker smuggling just months after agreeing to transfer refugees to the Southeast Asian nation.

The new memorandum of understand­ing will see the two nations exchange informatio­n on people- smuggling activities, building on September’s deal to transfer refugees held by Australia on the remote Pacific island of Nauru to Cambodia.

Under Canberra’s hardline immigratio­n policy, asylumseek­ers who arrive on boats are denied resettleme­nt in Australia and sent to Papua New Guinea and Nauru, even if they are genuine refugees.

“The agreement represents the renewed determinat­ion by Australia and Cambodia to work closely to counter the growing security threat posed by transnatio­nal crime and illegal migration practices,” Immigratio­n Minister Peter Dutton said in a statement as he welcomed Cambodia’s Deputy Prime Minister Sar Kheng to Canberra.

Sar Kheng said the agreement ref lected Phnom Penh’s commitment to ‘develop our capacity to fight this growing internatio­nal criminal activity’ of people-smuggling.

The deputy prime minister also defended Cambodia’s reported deportatio­n of 36 Vietnamese Montagnard­s last month after they were arrested while trying to seek asylum.

The mainly Christian ethnic minorities in Vietnam’s mountainou­s Central Highlands have crossed the border to Cambodia in recent years to escape discrimina­tion. — AFP

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