Cambodian, Australian PMs vow to implement refugee deal

    

    'This is what I don't understand! What give the Australian government the right to invoke "the 1951 Refugees Convention and 1967 Protocol related to Refugees" which Cambodia is a signatory and to hold Cambodia accountable to international obligation?

    What about the right of Cambodia to invoke the 1991 Paris Accords which Australia is a signatory and Australia has an obligation to hold AH HUN SEN Vietcong slave dictator accountable to enforce the 1991 Paris Accords to bring true peace and stability?

    If the Australian government is relentless in pursuit of their refugee agenda by invoking the "1951 Refugees Convention and 1967 Protocol related to Refugees"
    and held Cambodia to international obligation...then the opposition party will hold the Australian government the same way by invoking the 1991 Paris Accords which Australia is a signatory!


    Cambodia will not get a raw deal from Australian government!'
PHNOM PENH, Nov. 14 (Xinhua) -- Cambodia and Australia have reiterated their commitment to comply with a refugee agreement they signed in September despite criticism from human rights groups and opposition parties of the two countries.

The commitment was made during a meeting between Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen and his Australian counterpart Tony Abbott on the sidelines of the 25th ASEAN Summit in Myanmar on Wednesday.


"The two leaders agreed to fully implement the agreement on sending refugees from Australia to Cambodia, basing on a voluntary principle," Kao Kim Hourn, minister attached to Prime
   Minister Hun Sen, told a press conference at the midnight of Thursday while returning from Myanmar with Hun Sen.
He said Cambodia is a signatory to the 1951 Refugees Convention and 1967 Protocol related to Refugees, so it is an international obligation for Cambodia to take in asylum seekers.
The two countries inked the refugee deal on Sept. 26, under which Australia will send refugees, who intend to seek asylum in Australia and are being held in an offshore detention camp in the Pacific nation of Nauru, to resettle in Cambodia.

The deal has drawn criticism from human rights groups and opposition parties in both countries. They claimed Cambodia is too poor to take in Australia's refugees and accused Australia of shirking its human rights responsibilities to poorer and under- resourced nations.

According to Kao Kim Hourn, the two prime ministers also agreed to exchange their visits at a convenient time in the future.

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