Australia signs $400m deportation deal with Nauru

Australia signed an agreement with Nauru to deport the former prisoners without a valid visa to the Pacific Islands nation with a movement hit by refugee defenders.
Interior Minister Tony Burke quietly visited Little Atoll Nation on Friday, where President David Adeang met with his cabinet and other parliamentarians before he signed an understanding memorandum.
Australia will pay Nauru 408 million dollars when the first people arrive, and $ 70 million a year for re -settlement.
Human Rights Organizations follow a full date for protesting the deportation of people to the island of Micronesia after the United Nations private rapporteur found “systematic violations karşısında in the face of international torture.
Memorandum, according to Mr. Burke, “Australia in Australia, Nauru’da people who do not have the right to treat and long -term residence contains.”
Nauru will provide a long -term visa and open the door of Australia and a Supreme Court’s decision that hundreds of immigrant prisoners cannot be kept indefinitely.
The release of Nzyq Cohort in 2023 caused a political headache for the workers’ government after the scores were accused of more crimes after being released to the community.
Some had serious criminal convictions, while others were detained for visa problems.

Mr. Burke said the memorandum will target the Nzyq cohort.
“Anyone who does not have a valid visa should leave the country,” he said.
“This is a fundamental element of a working visa system.”
The asylum seeker resource center said that the agreement has opened a mass deportation door without notification and could affect 80,000 people.
“These confidential agreements send a clear message – some people in Australia will only be punished for being born, CE CEO Deputy Jan Favero said.
“This agreement is discriminatory, embarrassing and dangerous.”

Bethany Rose of Visa Captelations Working Group, a coalition of lawyers and academicians, said the government has removed key legal and accountability guards.
“Like everyone else, these people served their time and restarted their lives in communities, healed after years of uncertain detention,” he said.
“We are talking about people’s lives.”
After prevented three people from being sent there in February on Tuesday, Mr. Burke enacted the sub -house, which would support Commonwealth’s power to deport the non -citizens to Nauru.
If it passes, the laws will give the government the authority to beat the principles of natural justice that people have a fair trial. If there is a third country regulation, a person can be deported.

Burke said that procedural justice is a “basic principle in many areas of the decision -making process, but accused of using non -citizens of disappointment and delaying their deportation.
“These changes cannot be removed from the procedure from the procedures from the processes that support decisions to cancel or reject a visa grant, nor do they affect the rights examination.”
“These changes are largely aimed at the last steps in the process of lifting, where non -citizens who are on their way to a subtraction have claims to stay in Australia and to be rejected.”
Money is one of Australia, which provides Nauru 100 million dollars support and 40 million dollars policing in exchange for an effective security and critical infrastructure agreements with third countries.

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