Yahoo – AFP,
14 July 2014
Sydney (AFP) - Hollywood star and UN refugee envoy Angelina Jolie has accepted an invitation to visit the small island of Nauru where Australia sends asylum-seekers for processing and resettlement, the government said Monday.
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| Angelina Jolie, who has confirmed she will visit Nauru, the island where Australia sends asylum-seeksers for resettlement, speaks in London on June 13, 2014 (AFP Photo/Carl Court) |
Sydney (AFP) - Hollywood star and UN refugee envoy Angelina Jolie has accepted an invitation to visit the small island of Nauru where Australia sends asylum-seekers for processing and resettlement, the government said Monday.
Jolie, a UN
goodwill ambassador, was invited by the Pacific island nation's President Baron
Waqa when they met at the Global Summit to End Sexual Violence Against Women in
Conflict in London.
"The
government of Nauru can confirm that Angelina Jolie has accepted an invitation
by President Baron Waqa to visit our nation," a government spokeswoman
told AFP.
"We
believe this will be a wonderful opportunity to showcase the facilities for
refugees on Nauru, which we believe are world-best practice."
Under
Canberra's punitive offshore detention policy, asylum-seekers attempting to
arrive by boat are transferred to camps in Nauru or Papua New Guinea for
processing and permanent resettlement outside Australia.
Most of
those sent to Nauru are families with more than 1,000 people currently held and
another 99 having been resettled in the community.
Refugee
advocates have been deeply critical of the Australian policy and the United
Nations High Commissioner for Refugees last year slammed the facilities on
Papua New Guinea's Manus Island and Nauru.
It said
they failed to meet international standards of treatment and amounted to
arbitrary detention in breach of international law, while failing to provide an
efficient system for assessing refugee claims or safe and humane conditions.
It also
noted efforts made to improve conditions on steamy and mosquito-infested Nauru,
where people were forced to live in cramped tents with little privacy after
riots razed buildings last year.
Australian
Immigration Minister Scott Morrison, who rejected the criticism, said Monday
the Jolie visit was "a matter for the Nauruan government".
Asked
whether he was concerned the visit would shine a light on Australia's treatment
of asylum-seekers in Nauru, he told reporters: "I don't plan to respond to
any of the assertions you have made."
Nauru said
a date for Jolie's trip had yet to be finalised.

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