Despite a recent government announcement that four more refugees on
the Pacific island of Nauru had agreed to move to Cambodia, Interior
Minister Sar Kheng yesterday revised that number downward, saying two
who had reportedly shown interest had backed out after meeting with
Cambodian officials.
In an interview with PNN TV, Kheng said that officials from the
General Department of Immigration had visited Nauru after receiving word
of the refugees’ interest from the Australian government. The move
falls under a highly controversial agreement struck between the two
governments last year in which the Kingdom promised to accept refugees
being held by Australia on Nauru in exchange for A$40 million (US$28.3
million) in aid.
“We have sent officials for interviews, but the result I have
received is that only two among the four volunteered to come; the other
two did not wish to come to live in Cambodia,” Kheng said.
He did not mention when the two refugees, both Rohingya, were expected to arrive.
In June, Cambodia accepted four refugees – three Iranians and one
ethnic Rohingya from Myanmar – who agreed to resettlement in Cambodia
after being offered numerous perks, including a sizable monetary
inducement.
The Rohingya has since requested to return to Myanmar, saying he
missed his family, and the Myanmar Embassy is currently waiting on
paperwork to process the return.
“We’re paying a lot of attention to integrating the three remaining
[refugees] so that they can have the right and freedom to live like
Cambodian people,” Kheng said yesterday.
Tan Sokvichea, head of the Immigration Department’s Refugee Division,
said yesterday that the government of Australia and the International
Organization for Migration will facilitate the process of bringing the
two new volunteers to Cambodia.
“These two refugees are men, and both of them are Rohingya,” Sokvichea said.
Interior Ministry spokesman Khieu Sopheak originally said last month
that the latest group of four also contained three Iranians and one
Rohingya.
Ian Rintoul, of the Australia-based Refugee Action Coalition, said
that while he had not heard of Cambodian officials’ trip to Nauru, it
was unsurprising that there hadn’t been more interest in resettlement in
Cambodia.
“The Cambodia deal is a joke. The more people that realise that, the
better,” he said. “People only really see Cambodia as a stepping stone.
The word that’s coming back to Nauru is that . . . the money [offered to
those who go] isn’t being given to them in any lump sum that’s usable.”
“The word on Nauru is that there is no sweet deal at all . . . In
terms of what they’ve heard, it’s all bad,” he continued. “They’ve got
thousands of people in desperate conditions [on Nauru], and they can
find four [volunteers].”
Thursday, October 1, 2015
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