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If they are (I didn't see anything preventing them after a quick reading of the code), then they trigger the 0.01BTC micro-transaction fee.
I'll be doing a lot of experimenting (on the TEST network, of course) with refunding transactions over the next few weeks. I think the UI issue can be resolved (it should be pretty straightforward to teach the UI to recognize refund transactions and show them as "refund from BLAH", where BLAH is either a BC address or a label from your address book.
I've already implemented a "refundtransaction" api call, but it still needs work before it would be ready for standard bitcoin. In particular, it shouldn't be possible to create infinite 'refundtransaction' loops (where you accidentally or purposely refundtransaction a refunded transaction, probably triggering another refund, etc).
And refunding a transaction should, ideally, use the same "coins" (... should have the same ancestor transactions, for anybody who's going to get all pedantic on me) as the original transaction, if possible, so if that original transaction is exactly as valid as the original transaction. Otherwise it might be possible to generate a bad transaction, send it somewhere you know it will get refunded immediately with different, valid transactions, and so "launder" your bad bitcoins for good.