Foreign Minister Julie Bishop's negotiations with her Iranian counterpart Javad Zarif were well advanced on a deal expected to be signed next week that would lift Tehran's long-standing refusal to accept Iranian asylum seekers who don't want to come home, The West Australian newspaper reported.
Bishop's spokeswoman Rachel Obradovic confirmed that the newspaper report was accurate.
Under the repatriation agreement expected to be signed by Zarif when he visits the Australian capital Canberra on Tuesday, Australia would demand guarantees from Iran that Iranians who returned home would not be persecuted or punished.
But most live in the Australian community. It is not clear how many of them are genuine refugees who could not be sent back to Iran, but Australia regards the majority of asylum seekers from Iran to be economic migrants rather than refugees.
They have been left with uncertain futures, with Australia refusing to resettle them and Iran refusing to take them back.
An Iranian refugee couple who resettled in Cambodia under an expensive program funded by Australia to keep asylum-seekers from its soil returned to their homeland in February, Cambodian and Australian officials said.
"The Iranian couple told us that they decided to go back to Iran after they felt homesick," Tan Sovichea said.
Last October, one of two ethnic Rohingya men resettled under the deal went home to Myanmar, leaving only an Iranian and another Rohingya in Cambodia. Tan Sovichea said they appeared to be happy with their new lives.
The new Australian deal with Iran would reflect Tehran's determination to improve its economic and diplomatic relations with the West in the wake of last year's landmark international nuclear agreement which removed sanctions.
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