Mr Hun Sen has brutally quashed opposition and dissent in the country over his three decade rule in the country where 18 per cent of the country's 15 million people survive on less than $1.22 a day.
Cambodia agrees to resettle more refugees from Nauru
Sydney Morning Herald | 10 September 2015
Peter Dutton is expected to announce
that more refugees from Nauru will be resettled in Cambodia. Photo: Andrew Meares
Bangkok: Immigration minister Peter Dutton has met Cambodia's strongman Prime Minister Hun Sen to salvage a $55 million agreement with the impoverished nation to resettle more refugees from Nauru.
Only days after declaring it had no plans to resettle more
than four refugees who arrived in June, Cambodia says it is now ready to
take more in groups of four or five.
The breakthrough came after
Mr Dutton flew to the Cambodian capital Phnom Penh from Europe where he
held talks on Europe's migration crisis.
Mr Dutton said meetings he held with Mr Hun Sen and the country's powerful Interior Minister Sar Kheng "reinforced the commitment of both nations to the successful implementation of the resettlement arrangements of refugees from Nauru."
He indicated that more refugees on Nauru had "expressed interest in moving to Cambodia" but gave no details.
Senior Cambodian official Sri Thamrong told the Phnom Penh Post that
Cambodia is "ready to accept more refugees… we will send our officials,
a team from the Ministry of Interior, to interview them."
"We want to have more refugees come, a group of four or five people at a time," he said.
Mr
Dutton last week downplayed reports the agreement with Cambodia
appeared to have collapsed and suggested that more refugees from Nauru
may be willing to give up their hopes of reaching Australia to take a
one-way flight to Cambodia, one of the world's poorest nations.
Interior
Ministry spokesman Khieu Sopheak had earlier said the agreement with
Australia remained valid "but at the moment we want to see the first
pilot refugees that have already arrived here integrate into our society
before we accept newcomers."
The agreement gives Cambodia the right to decide how many refugees it accepts.
One
of the refugees who arrived in June, a 25-year-old Rohingya Muslim from
Myanmar, has asked to return to his homeland and three Iranians have
complained about the resettlement arrangements despite living in a
luxury Australian paid villa in a Phnom Penh suburb. Refugee agency
sources in Phnom Penh have confirmed to Fairfax Media the refugees have
been unhappy about restrictions on their movements despite being
promised training, help finding work, language tuition, health insurance
and other benefits.
Myanmar's embassy in Phnom Penh has
confirmed that the Rohingya man asked on August 7 to return to Myanmar
where Rohingya Muslims say they face persecution and denial of basic
rights.
Myanmar's military-dominated government has not yet granted approval.
Phnom Penh Post journalist
Alice Cuddy said that Mr Dutton met with half a dozen Australian
officials at five-star Raffles Le Royal Hotel on Wednesday evening,
including Australian ambassador Alison Burrows.
She said over coffees and beers they were overheard discussing what Mr Dutton would put in his statement on Thursday.
Mr Dutton said "maybe we'll say Cambodian officials will ensure to make arrangements for the next group" of refugees.
Australia has
spent $15 million to resettle the four refugees in Cambodia on top of
$40 million in additional development aid the Abbott government gave Mr
Hun Sen's regime in return for the agreement that has been criticised by
Cambodia's opposition parties and human rights and refugee advocacy
groups.
The government has thrown huge resources to convince
refugees on Nauru to go to Cambodia with immigration officials on the
Pacific island portraying Cambodia as a sort of developing utopia.
Mr
Hun Sen has brutally quashed opposition and dissent in the country over
his three decade rule in the country where 18 per cent of the country's
15 million people survive on less than $1.22 a day.
Refugee
advocates had doubted that any more refugees on Nauru would agree to
resettle in the country where refugees already there have complained of
discrimination and inability to get access to jobs, education and health
services.
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