By Washington bureau chief Zoe Daniel
The White House has backtracked on a promise to honour a refugee deal with Australia, saying President Donald Trump is still considering whether it will go ahead.
The clarification came soon after White House press secretary Sean Spicer said the deal was going ahead provided the refugees were subjected to “extreme vetting” procedures.
In a follow-up phone call to the ABC, a White House source said if the President does decide to honour the deal, it will only be because of America’s “longstanding relationship with Australia”.
Earlier Mr Spicer said the deal, struck between the Obama administration and Turnbull Government, would include approximately 1,250 refugees, many from countries covered by the new administration’s bans on entry to residents from seven majority Muslim nations.
“That is part and parcel of the deal that was made, and it was made by the Obama administration with the full backing of the United States Government.”
According to the latest statistics from the Immigration Department, there are 871 people on Manus Island and 383 people on Nauru.
The ABC understands most of the refugees are from Iran, with some also from Iraq and Somalia, three of the countries on the Trump administration’s travel ban list.
At a briefing earlier, US Homeland Security Secretary John Kelly said “we are looking at various options right now” with regard to “extreme vetting”.
“There are many countries — seven that we are dealing with right now — that in our view don’t have the kind of law enforcement, records keeping that can convince us that one of their citizens is indeed who that citizen says they are and what their background might be,” he said.