Refugee detention to end on Nauru
Tue, 6 October 2015 ppp
AFP and Shaun Turton
The
Pacific island of Nauru announced yesterday that it would end detention
of asylum seekers and process the outstanding refugee claims of some
600 people held in the Australian immigration camp within a week.
The
decision, however, is unlikely to boost volunteers for the
controversial Cambodia resettlement program, a Cambodian government
official and Australian refugee activist said yesterday.
Nauru’s
Regional Processing Centre (RPC) – set up under Canberra’s hard-line,
offshore-processing policy to hold asylum seekers caught trying to enter
Australia via boat – will become an “open centre”, according to Nauru’s
justice minister, David Adeang.
As
part of this, Nauru will process, within a week, outstanding refugee
claims for those living in the centre, some 600 people, who will now be
able to roam around the tiny island.
“The
start of detention-free processing is a landmark day for Nauru and
represents an even more compassionate program, which was always the
intention of our government,” Adeang said.
Those
deemed refugees are not permitted to resettle in Australia but can
return home, stay on Nauru or resettle in the Kingdom under a heavily
criticised A$40 million ($28.3 million) deal signed by Phnom Penh and
Canberra last year.
However,
so far, only four have agreed, arriving in June. Since then, one of the
group, a Rohingya man, has asked to return to Myanmar. An additional
two volunteers, both Rohingya, are currently being screened, after being
visited by Cambodian officials last month.
Speaking
yesterday, Interior Ministry spokesman General Khieu Sopheak said that
he did not expect the low take-up rate to change, citing the recent
decision of four refugees to withdraw their requests to move to
Cambodia.
“From this experience, I think the volunteers for Cambodia will not be increasing,” Sopheak said.
“But
we will still implement and observe the MoU that has been signed with
the Australian government on the basis of voluntary resettlement.”
Ian
Rintoul, spokesman for the Refugee Action Coalition, said the end of
detention could see “even fewer” people interested in Cambodia.
“For some people who were in detention, accepting Cambodia was a way of getting a refugee visa,” Rintoul said.
“But
now all will have their determinations . . . Of course, Nauru could try
and offer those with negative decisions the chance to go to Cambodia –
to try keep the deal alive – but that will be more transparent now.”
Adeang
said Australia was assisting the transition to an open centre,
including providing more police support and suitable health care for the
asylum seekers.
Under
the plan, the number of community liaison officers will be increased
from 135 to 320 to help asylum seekers, who come from countries
including Iran and Sri Lanka, settle in the country of 10,000.
Australian
Immigration Minister Peter Dutton welcomed the news and said Canberra
was committed to the regional processing arrangements.
However,
refugee advocates, who allege that abuses, including rape, have
occurred on the island, said the change was an 11th-hour move that
coincided with an Australian court case this week challenging the
legality of Canberra’s policy.
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