on 16-10-2015 07:17 AM
One of four refugees transferred to Cambodia as part of an arrangement costing the Australian Government at least $55 million has reportedly returned to Burma.
Three Iranians and the Burmese man left Nauru in May and landed in Phnom Penh a month later.
The Cambodia Daily newspaper reported the ethnic Rohingya man was scheduled to fly out of Cambodia on Sunday after asking to leave last month.
The Cambodian government reportedly said the man asked to go because he was homesick.
Australia is giving the Cambodian government $40 million in extra aid after it agreed to take refugees who tried to reach Australia by boat.
The Government is also paying $15.5 million to the International Organisation for Migration (IOM) to support the refugees who move there.
"Unfortunately, IOM can't discuss the case due to confidentiality principles, as well as the direct request of the client," they said.
"He has specifically asked IOM not to make any statements to the media regarding his case."
Greens immigration spokeswoman Sarah Hanson-Young slammed the Australia-Cambodia arrangement as a waste of taxpayers' money.
"$55 million is a very expensive plane ticket for these four people simply to dump them back in the Asia-Pacific," Senator Hanson-Young said.
"The money that Australia has paid that country is a bribe so that people can simply be sent there and dumped there and so the Australian Government doesn't have to look after them," she said.
"This isn't a solution, this is a waste of money and unfortunately we're playing with the lives of refugees."
The group was taken to an Australian-funded villa after arriving in Phnom Penh in June and promised language training and other assistance.
The Government has previously said it was confident Cambodia would resettle more than the initial four, and has said negotiations are underway to find other countries that will take refugees.
Info on International Organisation for Migrants: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/International_Organization_for_Migration
I am interested in this story. But I do have some doubt about certain aspects - as I do with most ABC news articles these days, unfortunately.
Ms Hanson-Young's statement which appears to include the $15.5million to IMO, implies that the money is only for this programme.
Is the former asylum seeker, moving back to Burma permanently?
DEB
on 16-10-2015 11:04 AM
@lloydslights wrote:One of four refugees transferred to Cambodia as part of an arrangement costing the Australian Government at least $55 million has reportedly returned to Burma.
Three Iranians and the Burmese man left Nauru in May and landed in Phnom Penh a month later.
The Cambodia Daily newspaper reported the ethnic Rohingya man was scheduled to fly out of Cambodia on Sunday after asking to leave last month.
The Cambodian government reportedly said the man asked to go because he was homesick.
Australia is giving the Cambodian government $40 million in extra aid after it agreed to take refugees who tried to reach Australia by boat.
The Government is also paying $15.5 million to the International Organisation for Migration (IOM) to support the refugees who move there.
"Unfortunately, IOM can't discuss the case due to confidentiality principles, as well as the direct request of the client," they said.
"He has specifically asked IOM not to make any statements to the media regarding his case."
Greens immigration spokeswoman Sarah Hanson-Young slammed the Australia-Cambodia arrangement as a waste of taxpayers' money.
"$55 million is a very expensive plane ticket for these four people simply to dump them back in the Asia-Pacific," Senator Hanson-Young said.
"The money that Australia has paid that country is a bribe so that people can simply be sent there and dumped there and so the Australian Government doesn't have to look after them," she said.
"This isn't a solution, this is a waste of money and unfortunately we're playing with the lives of refugees."
The group was taken to an Australian-funded villa after arriving in Phnom Penh in June and promised language training and other assistance.
The Government has previously said it was confident Cambodia would resettle more than the initial four, and has said negotiations are underway to find other countries that will take refugees.
Info on International Organisation for Migrants: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/International_Organization_for_Migration
I am interested in this story. But I do have some doubt about certain aspects - as I do with most ABC news articles these days, unfortunately.
Ms Hanson-Young's statement which appears to include the $15.5million to IMO, implies that the money is only for this programme.
Is the former asylum seeker, moving back to Burma permanently?
DEB
Anything Miss SHY spouts is not believable. Remember when we watched those poor people being dashed on rocks and dying in front of our eyes at Christmas island? Miss SHY said "accidents happen" not a tear was shed. She's a hypocrite of the highest order.
on 16-10-2015 03:22 PM
The point being missed here is he flew back to the country he claimed to be fleeing persecution, which proves he is either suicidal or was lying about being a refugee in the first place, as to the greens to me 15mil in aid if it stops the flow of economic refugees trying to come here is money well spent
on 16-10-2015 05:00 PM
Yes, that is another shortfall in the story. From the original news source: the man had all required travel documents
Only mentioned homesick. Holiday to see the relos? Helping the family to pack for them all to return to Cambodia. Or going back permanently?
DEB
on 16-10-2015 05:02 PM
on 16-10-2015 05:07 PM
Now, that's an enterprising idea!
16-10-2015 05:20 PM - edited 16-10-2015 05:21 PM
That's all I gotta say on the matter.Now if you'll excuse me I'm off to clean mah shootin' arn.I gots me some cute,defenseless animals to kill over the weekend.
16-10-2015 05:37 PM - edited 16-10-2015 05:41 PM
Make sure the target is identified correctly. And it really should have been cleaned after returning from the last hunt.
DEB
on 16-10-2015 05:50 PM
on 16-10-2015 07:21 PM
Difference being they were invited to come and came through proper channels , the current immigration problem is a direct result of the Vietnam war and the agreement signed to deal with boat people from then , so 2 entirely different situations, but let's not let the facts get in the way of making excuses to call people racist or red necks to try and intimidate them into not speaking out
on 17-10-2015 09:01 AM
I agree and no matter how he phrased it he is calling us, and anybody else who disagrees with him racist, bigots, rednecks and all other manner of vilification which is a violation.