Australia agrees to pay Pacific nation of Nauru $2.1 billion to house deportees

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Demonstrators carry Australian flags during the 'March for Australia' anti-immigration rally, in Sydney, Australia, on Aug 31.

Demonstrators carrying Australian flags during the March For Australia anti-immigration rally in Sydney, Australia, on Aug 31.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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SYDNEY – Australia has agreed to pay the tiny Pacific nation of Nauru A$2.5 billion (S$2.1 billion) over three decades to host deported non-citizens, with accommodation for the first deportees already prepared, Australian officials said on on Sept 3.

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese’s centre-left government is expected to pass a law on Aug 4 making it easier to deport non-citizens to third countries, reviving criticism from human rights groups that it was “dumping” refugees in small island states and drawing comparisons with US President Donald Trump’s immigration policies.

Australia on Aug 29

signed a deal with Nauru

to resettle hundreds of people who have been denied refugee visas because of criminal convictions.

The United States is seeking Pacific Island nations willing to accept deported non-citizens.

The planned new law removes procedural fairness when Australia deports a non-citizen to a third country and is designed to limit court appeals, said the government.

It is expected to pass in Australia’s Parliament after the opposition Liberal Party said it would support the move.

Australia will pay Nauru an upfront A$400 million to establish an endowment fund for the resettlement scheme, plus A$70 million annually for the 30-year life of the agreement, Australian officials told a parliamentary committee.

The funds can be clawed back by Australia if Nauru decides not to accept as many deportees as expected, the home affairs officials added.

Nauru was already involved in Australia’s policies on immigration: two-thirds of its revenue in 2024, or A$200 million, came from hosting an Australian-funded processing centre for asylum seekers.

Under a decade-old policy to discourage people smuggling, Australia sends asylum seekers who arrive by boat to offshore detention centres to have refugee claims assessed, denying them Australian visas.

The practice has been criticised by the United Nations Human Rights Committee.

Nauru, which has a population of 12,000 and a land area of just 21 sq km, is reliant on foreign aid, and faces a 2025 deadline to repay Taiwan A$43 million after switching diplomatic ties to Beijing, according to Budget documents.

New scheme covers different group

The new Nauru resettlement scheme will cover a different group, whose visas were cancelled by Australia because they served prison sentences or were refused visas on character grounds, and cannot return to countries including Iran, Myanmar and Iraq because of the risk of persecution.

Australia’s High Court ruled in 2023 that indefinite immigration detention was unlawful, resulting in around 350 non-citizens being released into the community, with a third subject to electronic monitoring.

One of this group, a 65-year-old Iraqi man, lost a High Court appeal against deportation to Nauru on Sept 3.

Australia will apply to Nauru for visas for the non-citizens “on a rolling basis commencing fairly soon”, the official told a parliamentary committee.

When a visa is approved by Nauru, the individual will be detained in Australia to prepare for deportation, the official added.

Law Council of Australia president Juliana Warner said on Sept 3 the deportation law was “troubling” because it could put those sent to Nauru at risk of not receiving necessary healthcare, and is being rushed through Parliament without adequate public scrutiny.

Several independent lawmakers said they were concerned it could be applied more widely than the 350 released by the High Court decision, with up to 80,000 people in the community without a visa.

Australian Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke declined to comment on the 80,000 figure, and has said the law change is needed to maintain the integrity of the migration system.

The move was “absolutely Trump-like”, said Ms Jana Favero, the deputy chief executive of the Asylum Seeker Resource Centre.

Independent lawmaker Monique Ryan told Parliament that Australia was “using a small island nation as a dumping ground”. REUTERS

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