Sar Kheng meets with Oz official
Australia's immigration minister, Scott Morrison, met with
Interior Minister Sar Kheng in Phnom Penh yesterday for talks following a
controversial request by Foreign Minister Julie Bishop in February for
Cambodia to take in some of its refugees.
The closed-door meeting at the Ministry of Interior came a day after
Morrison signed a deal that would allow refugees housed in Australia’s
controversial offshore Manus Island detention centre in Papua New Guinea
to be resettled in that country.
“Australian Immigration Minister [Morrison] met with Deputy Prime
Minister Sar Kheng [yesterday] morning at the Interior Ministry,” he
said, adding that he could not go into the details of what was
discussed.
Morrison’s office said in a statement yesterday that he was in Phnom
Penh to “further discussions on regional cooperation on people-smuggling
issues, following on from the earlier visit by [Bishop]”.
“Australia has ongoing engagement with countries across our region on
strengthening border protection and deterring the illegal movement of
people across borders,” the statement reads.
Phay Siphan, spokesman at the Council of Ministers, said he had not
been briefed on the meeting but that the Foreign Ministry may release
information at a later date.
“I haven’t yet heard the comments [from the meeting]. [The Foreign
Ministry] may respond to the proposal on the refugee issue,” he said.
Australian embassy officials did not respond to requests for comment yesterday, and Morrison declined to take a call from a Post
reporter to his hotel room. Cambodian Foreign Minister Hor Namhong said
in February that Bishop had proposed Cambodia resettle refugees in a
meeting with Prime Minister Hun Sen.
Australia neither confirmed nor denied the request had been made,
while Cambodia later said that it would not welcome refugees who wished
to use the country as a “springboard” for political activities, raising
questions about what protection Cambodia could offer.
Phil Robertson, deputy director of Human Rights Watch’s Asia
division, said Morrison’s visit showed the Abbott government’s
“shameful” stance on refugees.
“The Abbott government’s shameful, rights abusing behaviour
regarding refugees and asylum seekers apparently has no limits, and the
arrival of Scott Morrison in Phnom Penh indicates the thoroughly bad
idea of transferring Australia’s responsibilities to Cambodia is still
alive and kicking,” he said in an email.
“It’s time for UNHCR to stand up and say that this is unacceptable, and for Cambodia to drop the proposal altogether.”
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