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An Amnesty International photo said to show children playing at the Australian-run detention centre on the Pacific island nation of Nauru. Photo: Reuters

Australia planning to move refugees from Pacific island ‘detention centres’

Australia will find another country to resettle hundreds of asylum seekers now held on poor Pacific islands, a minister said on Tuesday as his government planned to banish for life refugees who arrive by boat.

Immigration Minister Peter Dutton declined to identify countries with which Australia is negotiating to accept almost 1,300 asylum seekers from Africa, the Middle East and Asia who are kept at Australia’s expense in camps on Nauru and in Papua New Guinea.
Australian Minister for Immigration Peter Dutton during a press conference at Parliament House in Canberra on November 8, 2016. Photo: EPA

“We have been in negotiation with third countries for a long period of time and we are going to land a deal,” Dutton told reporters, referring to countries that are neither the asylum seekers’ homelands nor the country where they are currently kept.

The Australian newspaper reported last week that the United States and Canada could be among the countries that will accept Australia’s asylum seekers.

An Amnesty International photo said to show children playing in the Nauru detention centre. Photo: Reuters

Few refugees have accepted offers to resettle in Papua New Guinea and Cambodia because most hope that Australia will eventually take them in.

Australia refuses to resettle any refugee who has arrived by boat since the date the tough policy was announced, July 19, 2013.

The government also introduced to parliament legislation that would ban such refugees from ever visiting Australia as a tourist, to do business or as an Australian’s spouse.

“This legislation sends a strong message to people smugglers and those considering travelling illegally to Australia by boat that Australia’s borders are now stronger than ever,” Dutton told parliament.

People march through Sydney on November 5, 2016, to protest against Australia's detention of asylum seekers on Nauru. Photo: AFP

But the centre-left opposition Labor Party said it will not support the legislation. Without Labor’s backing in the Senate, the conservative government will need to persuade independent and minor party senators to make the bill law.

“The idea that a citizen of the United States or Canada or New Zealand faces a lifetime ban preventing them from visiting Australia in 30 or 40 years’ time is simply unacceptable,” Labor leader Bill Shorten said.

Australia's opposition leader Bill Shorten on November 8, 2016. Photo: EPA

Australia has rejected a New Zealand offer to resettle 150 refugees. One of Australia’s reasons is that those refugees could then become New Zealand citizens and be entitled to live in Australia without a visa under the rules of the close bilateral relationship.

New Zealand Prime Minister John Key last week talked down the prospect of a deal that would ban refugees accepted by New Zealand from ever travelling to Australia.

“We’re not going to be in the process of creating different classes of New Zealand citizens,” Key said.

This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: Australia seeking another country to resettle refugees
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