First Australia refugees approved for US resettlement resettlement

06 January, 2018
First Australia refugees approved for US resettlement resettlement
Under a resettlement deal struck with the Obama administration in 2016, the US agreed to take up to 1,250 refugees.

President Donald Trump called the deal "dumb" but said he would honour it.

Under a controversial policy, Australia refuses to take in anyone trying to reach its territories unofficially by boat. They are intercepted and detained in the Nauru and Manus Island detention centres.

'They're disgusted with Australia'
Immigration Minister Peter Dutton confirmed the first group would depart from the centres in the coming weeks, and that others would learn of their fate in coming days.

A refugee advocacy group told the BBC that a small number of people had received their letters of approval on Tuesday.

Three Sudanese refugees were among those accepted, the Refugee Action Coalition said. They will leave the detention centre this weekend and fly to the US next week.

"The small amount of people who've gotten answers, they're quite happy because they're disgusted with Australia and eager to get to the US and somewhere they think is safe after four years of being illegally held," Ian Rintoul from the group told the BBC.

"However, it's bittersweet. The large majority of people at the centres are still waiting to hear and are worried about their futures."

He said up to a third of applicants were still waiting to be interviewed and vetted by US authorities, and that many were likely to miss out under the deal's limits.

There are an estimated 850 people being held at the Manus Island detention centre and 1,100 at the Nauru facility.

The agreement, which is being administered under the United Nations refugee agency UNCHR, is prioritising women, children and families and other refugees found to be the most vulnerable.

Adding to the pressure is the looming closure of the Manus detention centre. The Australian government says the facility will be closed by 31 October, with the future of the asylum seekers left there unclear.

The government says they will not be taken to Australia and will either be resettled in Papua New Guinea or sent back to their original countries.
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