Cambodia, Australia vow to honour refugee deal despite criticism
PHNOM PENH: Cambodia and Australia
have reiterated their commitment to comply with a refugee agreement they
signed last month, despite persistent criticism from human rights
groups and opposition parties of the two countries, a senior official
said on Sunday.
The commitment was made during a meeting on Friday
between Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen and Australian Foreign Minister
Julie Bishop on the sidelines of an Asia-Europe summit in Italy, Kao
Kim Hourn, minister attached to Hun Sen in charge of foreign affairs,
said.
The
official said Cambodia is a signatory to the 1951 Refugees Convention
and 1967 Protocol related to Refugees, so it is an international
obligation for the country to take in asylum seekers. “Cambodia will
accept refugees from Australia based on a voluntary principle,” he said.
Australia and Cambodia inked the refugee deal on Sept. 26, under which
Canberra will send refugees, who intend to seek asylum in Australia and
are being held in an offshore detention camp in the tiny Pacific nation
of Nauru, to resettle in Cambodia.
The deal has drawn criticism from
human rights groups and opposition parties in both countries. They
claimed Cambodia is not rich enough to take in Australia’s refugees and
accused Canberra of shirking its human rights responsibilities to other
poorer and under-resourced nations.
On Friday, more than 100
Cambodian human rights activists, youths and Buddhist monks marched in
Phnom Penh in the latest round of protests against the deal.
Long
Visalo, Cambodian Foreign Secretary of State, said last month that a
small group of the refugees could be resettled in Cambodia by the end of
this year or early next year.
Under the offshore processing scheme,
which Australia says is aimed at deterring people-smugglers, any
asylum-seeker arriving by boat or intercepted at sea is transferred to
detention centers in Manus island of Papua New Guinea or Nauru for
processing.
If their asylum claims were approved, they would only be allowed to settle outside Australia.
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