Labor not ‘dumping a bunch of crims’ on Nauru with secretive NZYQ deal, minister says

The Albanian government, with a secret agreement of 408 million dollars with Nauru, says, “A lot of crimes are not poured into a poor country.”
On Friday, the Minister of Interior and Immigration Tony Burke and Nauru President David Adeang made a memorandum of agreement that allowed Australia to send hundreds of Nzyq cohort to the nation to the small Pacific Island.
The memorandum of the memorandum committed Australia to pay a $ 408 million and $ 70 million a year to cover the ongoing re -settlement costs.
Mr. Burke’s trip was kept quiet and was quietly published on the Interior website instead of sending it with printed e -mail as it was normal.
At the beginning of the week, Mr. Burke also brought the legislation that has not been deported to third countries with the right to natural justice-a fair hearing for someone who was affected by this decision.
Cabinet Minister Murray Watt advocated the agreement on Sunday and said, “We are talking about a relatively small group that has no right to be in Australia,” he said.
“Australia has the right to remove people who have no right to be here,” Senator Watt said.
“Nauru agreed to accept a large number of cohort we mentioned and agreed to pay to assist the management of this cohort.”
He continued to say, “Nauru is an independent sovereign nation”.
“He can make his own decisions about what he wants to do, and the fact that they have reached this agreement with Australia solves this problem, which is difficult to deal with the governments of both persuasions,” he said.
Nzyq cohortu is a group of detainees who canceled previous visas due to criminal convictions or other character problems.
They could not be deported or not to accept them in their own country because they were stateless, faced with a real risk of harm in their own countries.
In the late 2023, the Supreme Court decided that the cohort would not be deported, indefinitely detained.
Approximately 150 of them were released in prison and placed in a bridge visa under strict conditions and revealed public security concerns because they had serious convictions, including dozens of murder, sexual assault and armed robbery.
Kohorta has approximately 350 percent of Nauru’s entire population has 2.9 percent.
It is unclear how many people will be re -established in the country, and Senator Watt fled by giving a figure because hundreds of people did not decide to go.
Minister Amanda Rishworth also defended the Worker’s discussion and underestimated the confidentiality of journalists in Adelaide.
“I can say that Minister Burke is working on many immigration problems, R Rishworth said.
“It is important that they leave as soon as possible.
“With this critical importance and through a legislation, it is his focal point, with other regulations, it is working on it.”
In addition, he did not object that hundreds of people would be sent to Nauru.


