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| Issue No 31 | March 2001 | |||||
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| Amendments to criminal provisions in
immigration and citizenship laws Amendments to the Migration Act, the Australian Citizenship Act and the Immigration (Guardianship of Children) Act have been introduced into the Federal Parliament by the government. If passed, the new laws will convert a wide variety of offences under those laws into "strict liability" offences, which means that it wll not be necessary to prove that the accused person had any intention to break the law. The offences concerned include failure to provide information or documents to the Department of Information in relation to the identity or whereabouts of non-citizens without visas. Other changes to criminal provisions remove the requirement that the was no "reasonable excuse" for the accused person breaching the provision, and require instead that the accused provide evidence of such an excuse, or of an inability to comply with the law. Bill to increase powers of detention centre staff Staff at Australia's immigration detention and "immigration processing and reception" centres, who are employees of a US-based private prison operator, will be given powers to strip search detainees and search their clothing under a proposed amendment to the Migration Act currently before the Federal Parliament. Australia's treatment of the thousands of inmates held in these institutions continues to attract criticism inside and outside the country. Opposition parties in the Parliament have called for an independent judicial inquiry, rather than simply handing out more powers. Migration Legislation (Immigration Detainees) Bill 2001 - text and explanatory memorandum New Fees and Charges from 1 April 2001 With effect from 1 April, most fees and charges for visas and other immigration services increase by about five percent. The Migration Act stipulates that a visa application is valid only if the correct fee is paid at the time of lodgement. Applications sent by post with the old fee, therefore, may not be considered as validly lodged until the extra amount is paid. There were no increases to review application fees. Australian and other immigration fees A man set fire to himself outside the Federal Parliament on 2 April to draw attention to his attempts to bring his family to Australia from Pakistan. The man is believed to have been allowed to stay in Australia as a refugee, while his family has been denied entry because of a medical condition affecting one of his children. Fourteen detainees escaped from the Immigration Detention Centre at Villawood on 26 March. The group consists of seven men, two women and five children. Minister for
Immigration and Multicultural Affairs v Jia Legeng Minister for
Immigration and Multicultural Affairs v Anthonypillai Parish
Patience Immigration Tel: +612
9286 8700 Liability is limited by the Solicitors Scheme under the Professional Standards Act 1994 (NSW) Previous editions:
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Parish Patience Immigration 2001. All rights reserved.
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