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Mudlanders cause Problems in Ozland. Ang mors stupid to allow it.

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Criminals faking Malaysian identities to obtain Australia visas, exploiting cosy international relationship
BY NINO BUCCI, ABC INVESTIGATIONS
UPDATED YESTERDAY AT 4:16PM
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Man wearing ABF uniform interviews man, pixelated, wearing yellow t-shirt in a house with several other people of Asian descent
PHOTO Australian Border Force interview a man after a raid as part of Operation Bonasus.
SUPPLIED: ABF
Criminal syndicates are using counterfeiting networks in Malaysia to smuggle people into Australia, exploiting a relaxed visa agreement between the countries.

About 10,500 people from Malaysia are in Australia unlawfully — significantly more than any other country.

Malaysian passport holders enjoy an easier passage to Australia than people from almost anywhere else — a process that Department of Home Affairs officials have described as "the lightest touch."

But an ABC investigation has uncovered that people smugglers have helped nationals of other countries assume fake Malaysian identities so they can enter Australia the same way.

A Vietnamese man who spent five months in Malaysia awaiting documents to travel to Australia has spoken to the ABC about his ordeal.

Until last month, he was trapped with 37 other people from Vietnam in a hotel in Kuala Lumpur — all of whom had been promised safe passage to Australia and a job once they arrived.

"They said that it's easier here [in Malaysia] and I would not get my Australian visa if I submitted my application from Vietnam," the man told the ABC.

Citizens of most other ASEAN countries can travel to Malaysia without a visa. Once there, a passport can be fraudulently obtained in Malaysia for as little as $1300, according to Malaysian national security expert Andrin Raj.

Those ASEAN countries include Vietnam, Indonesia and the Philippines, whose citizens come under far more scrutiny when applying to travel to Australia than those from Malaysia.

This combination of an easy passage into Malaysia and an easy way to obtain false identification makes Malaysia the perfect staging ground for people smugglers, according to former Australian Border Force Commissioner Roman Quaedvlieg.

"It's a system that's corrupt inherently," Mr Quaedvlieg told the ABC.

Concerns terrorists could exploit system
Malaysian authorities have purged some corrupt officials involved in counterfeiting networks, but remain troubled by the scale of the problem and the threat it poses to national security.

Islamic State-linked extremists from the Philippines have been found living in the country with fake Malaysian identification, the New Straits Times reported in February.

Man in uniform sits in front of microphone
PHOTO Former ABF commissioner Roman Quaedvlieg said Australia's relationship with Malaysia could be exploited by extremists.
AAP: MICK TSIKAS
Australian authorities are deeply concerned extremists from Indonesia and the Philippines may slip into the country using Malaysian identification, according to Mr Quaedvlieg.

It is understood some Malaysians with extremist links have already travelled to Australia on the same tourist visas.

In 2016, the ABF launched a crackdown on visa overstayers sparked by suspicious money transfers made by several Malaysian men working illegally on Victorian farms.

The men were suspected of sending money to Middle East-based extremists, and were deported, a Border Force source told the ABC.

Operation Bonasus was launched. Targeting overstayers, it uncovered widespread visa rorting, and almost 290 people were detained.

Stuck in a Malaysian hotel
People smugglers are still in business — two years after the launch of Bonasus — because of desperate men like Tran* (not his real name).

He is aged in his 20s and from the north-central Vietnamese province of Nghe An.

His wife is pregnant with their first child and Tran wanted to work in Australia so he could earn as much as possible to support his family.

Man sitting wearing brown and blue shirt with glasses in hotel room.
PHOTO One of the people smugglers who promised Tran passage into Australia.
SUPPLIED
A family member introduced Tran to a smuggler who promised he could get him to Australia.

The smuggler told him he could work for 10 years in Australia if he used his services to travel to Malaysia first.

Tran arrived in Kuala Lumpur in March and hoped to be working in Australia only two weeks later.

But by August, he was still waiting in his $20 per night hotel.

His Malaysian tourist visa expired after a month, so he did not want to stray far from the hotel in case he was detained.

The smugglers — a Malaysian man and a Vietnamese man — were also staying in the hotel and had taken his Vietnamese passport, saying they needed it to organise his Malaysian documents.

Tran was trapped. He said 37 other Vietnamese men and women who also planned to work in Australia were in the hotel with him.

"I just wait and do nothing, because I have no passport and no money," he said, via a translator.

Tran said he paid the smugglers about $50,000 and said others paid similar amounts.

Man in white shirt lies on bed, in hotel room with green wall.
PHOTO One of the 37 men stuck with Tran* in a Malaysian hotel.
SUPPLIED
Some had taken out loans to pay the smugglers and would have to sell their houses in Vietnam to repay the loans if they were unable to travel to Australia and work.

Others had even brought the titles for their properties or vehicles to help pay for any additional costs, as they had spent all their cash just to get to Malaysia.

The smugglers made the group sign contracts that committed them to working on a farm in Australia for the syndicate after they arrived.

Tran said that it was well-known in his province there was little prospect of being able to travel to Australia legally from Vietnam, but the syndicate promised they had a way.

Three men, faces pixelated, sitting on the ground.
PHOTO Men from Vietnam wait in a Malaysian hotel on the false hope they'll make their way to Australia.
SUPPLIED
"They said that if I applied through their company, I would not need to worry about anything", he said.

Footage covertly filmed by Tran in July shows the Malaysian and Vietnamese organisers promising the group they would travel to Melbourne within days.

"You all have to work there, in the city of Melbourne," the Malaysian smuggler said in the video.

In the same video, the Vietnamese smuggler tries to assure the group that despite the delay, everything was going smoothly.

"All steps have been completed," he said. "It's time to reap what you sow."

But in late August, Tran and two others convinced the smugglers to hand back their passports so they could return to Vietnam. He flew home days later, and has not heard from the others about whether they made it to Australia.

The Malaysia issue
Malaysia's rise as a source country for people who are illegally in Australia has accelerated in recent years.

The ABF would not provide a historical breakdown of figures, but it is believed the number of Malaysian unlawful non-citizens has almost doubled since 2015. The ABF said the total number of overstayers has remained "relatively static" at about 63,000.

Malaysia is one of only eight countries whose citizens can apply for an Electronic Travel Authority visa online. Those visas can be granted in a matter of hours.

People sit in a dark bus
PHOTO A busload of people are detained in Queensland following a raid as part of Operation Bonasus.
SUPPLIED: ABF
James Copeman, the ABF field and removal operations commander, told the Joint Standing Committee on Migration in June that more than 300 people were refused entry to Australia as part of Bonasus.

He did not clarify why their entry was blocked, including whether any were found to have fraudulent passports.

Christine Dacey, a first assistant secretary at the Department of Home Affairs, told the same committee hearing that the ETAs were "probably the lightest touch visa that we offer".

"Malaysia is one of the countries that has access to it. I think it would be fair to say that we have identified ... that there is an issue there," she said.

Neither official outlined steps taken by the department — other than Bonasus, which is no longer running — to stop the flow of people arriving from Malaysia to work illegally in Australia.

A Department of Home Affairs insider, who could not be identified as he was speaking without authorisation, believes there has been a crackdown at airports

He said Home Affairs officers — particularly in Melbourne — are increasingly turning away Malaysian passport holders.

The insider said Malaysians were renowned for returning to Australia with a passport in a slightly different name only months after they had been deported for working illegally, using the same counterfeiting networks that had been exploited by people from other countries.

Fingerprints taken when they were first deported confirmed they were the same person.

An Australian Border Force officer, with badge in foreground, holds a passport in background.
PHOTO Malaysian passport holders are increasingly being turned away at Australian airports.
SUPPLIED: ABF
The insider said it was almost impossible to detect someone travelling with a fraudulently obtained passport, as Australian authorities were unable to determine the legitimacy of the documents used to grant it.

This underlined the department's push to increasingly use controversial biometric technology, he said, including facial recognition software, which gave them another tool to uncover fraud.

The department said it was working closely with the Malaysian government to prevent people using fraudulently obtained passports to enter Australia. Part of the measures put in place include employing Airline Liaison Officers in Malaysia to monitor flights to Australia.

"ALOs are highly skilled in document examination, impostor detection and passenger assessment," the ABF said.

The officers prevented the travel of 37 Malaysian nationals, the ABF said, but it could not clarify whether any of those individuals had fraudulently obtained passports.

The Malaysia embassy in Australia and officials in Malaysia declined to comment on what was being done to counteract passport fraud or people smuggling.

Migration agents: part of the problem and the solution.
Jason Wood, the chair of the Joint Standing Committee on Migration, believes organised criminals are involved in the movement of people from Malaysia to Australia and there is only so much Australian authorities can do to halt the flow.

His committee is currently investigating the role of migration agents, who often lodge applications for protection visas for Malaysians arriving in Australia on an ETA visa.

Mr Wood believes the applications represent an orchestrated scam that gives those who apply work rights in Australia until their claims are finalised, a process that can take eight years. The committee was alerted to the problem by migration agents.

Applications by Malaysians have increased from 4800 to 9060 in the past two years.

"Any time you can make money, organised crime groups will get involved and that's precisely what's happened here," Mr Wood said.

Migration agent Libby Hogarth said she told the Department of Home Affairs in 2016 that Malaysians were rorting ETA visas on a grand scale.

Ms Hogarth, a migration agent for more than 25 years who does much of her work at farms along the Murray River, dismisses the rhetoric about Operation Sovereign Borders putting people smugglers out of business.

Her first thought, after 15 Malaysians approached her on a visit to the Riverland in South Australia at least two years ago, was that "the people smugglers who have lost their work in Indonesia have moved on to a different model."

POSTED SUN AT 3:04AM
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Problem because dome minorities sre selling their passports and IC's and then reporting it stolen.
 
It’s not a coincidence all these lawless shit happen in mudland. Like murder of kim brother also in mudland.
 
More shit from mudlanders

Border Force working to stop Malaysians in 'orchestrated scam' to stay in Australia - Politics
Updated about an hour ago
11271840-3x2-460x307.jpg
PHOTO Thousands of Malaysian visitors are being refused entry to Australia. SUPPLIED: KHAIRIL YUSOF/FLICKR (CC BY 2.0)
Border officials are refusing entry to 20 Malaysians at Australian airports every week, to address what has been dubbed an "orchestrated scam" to gain access to the country.
Recent years have seen a surge in the numbers of Malaysian visitors coming to Australia on electronic visitor visas, and then going on to apply for protection visas in a bid to stay longer.
In cases where authorities have rejected the protection visas, the Malaysians have appealed against the decision and extended their stays in the process.
The Government's latest strategy to address the influx has emerged in new information being released as part of Senate estimates.
Between July 2017 and February 2019 1,779 Malaysians had their visas cancelled before clearing immigration — more than 20 each week.
This represents almost one third of all removals, even though Malaysia provides fewer than one in 20 tourists to Australia.
Refugee Council concerned
Jason Wood, the new Minister for Multicultural Affairs, speaking before he took on that role, said the Malaysian visitors were making a bid to work around existing visa laws.
"This represents an orchestrated scam that provides protection visa applicants the right to work in Australia until their claims are finalised," Mr Wood said.
At the end of 2018, of approximately 10,000 electronic visa holders who had overstayed their visa, three-quarters were from Malaysia.
The Government is now refusing entry to hundreds of Malaysians each year before they clear immigration at airports.
The trend is "concerning" due a lack of transparency, according to Asher Hirsch, a senior policy officer at the Refugee Council.
"While legislation and the department's policy says that people who claim asylum at the airport must be allowed to lodge a protection application, we have heard worrying stories from lawyers and refugees themselves of people being returned at the border without the chance to apply for asylum," he said.
"While not every person who seeks asylum at an Australian airport will be a refugee, without a proper assessment of their claims there is a very real risk that we are sending people back to harm."​
Link to online visa
The electronic visa, officially called an "electronic travel authority", was made available to Malaysians in 1997.
Surges in visitors applying for protection visas have occurred before, such as during the late 1990s Asian economic crisis, but the recent influx is significant.
About 1,400 protection visa lodgements came from Malaysians while they were in Australia in 2014-15.
The following year, the number increased to about 3,500, before surging to 8,600 in 2016-17. The lodgements then grew to 9,300 last year.
Many of these people are appealing the rejection of their protection claims, allowing them to stay in Australia — often for two years or more — with full work rights.
Defending these appeals has cost taxpayers close to $50 million in the past three years.
A parliamentary committee, which Mr Wood chaired in February, recommended that electronic visa holders who lodged a protection visa application be "fast-tracked" and have limited rights to appeal.
The Government is yet to respond to these recommendations.
Better than boats?
Home Affairs Minister Peter Dutton, two weeks ago, played down the problem of airport arrivals compared to boat arrivals.
"If you've hopped onto a plane, you've got travel documents. We know who you are," he said.
"We're able to work with Interpol or the country of origin to determine whether that person is a threat. We can look properly at their backgrounds.
"We don't have people drowning on planes coming in to Australia.
"We are able to manage because we have airport liaison officers in Dubai, in major hub ports, so that we can offload people where we know there is a threat.
"And people who come, where they have genuine documentation, we can deal with them."
Mr Dutton said 90 per cent of air arrivals had claims for protection rejected.
Posted about 4 hours ago
 
My sources tell me that Malaysian illegal immigrants are working in Australia as fruit pickers.
 
Ang Mohs themselves are no angels and exploiting illegal labour for profit.
 
Is ginfreely doing the same hiding in Johor? She wants to sell CB all the way to Australia?
 
My sources tell me that Malaysian illegal immigrants are working in Australia as fruit pickers.
Why don't Ozzy open up their country to India? All the fruit pickers they will ever need in one comprehensive agreement? :thumbsdown:
 
My sources tell me that Malaysian illegal immigrants are working in Australia as fruit pickers.
Your source is correct.
I heard one father went fruit picking for one year. Then again the next and bought the family a house in KL.
He then took the son along for the following season. Durian fruit pickers don't earn that much in KL.
 
Why don't Ozzy open up their country to India? All the fruit pickers they will ever need in one comprehensive agreement? :thumbsdown:
Genetically, tamils and aborigines are from the first wave of humans coming out of africa. So to answer your question, they are already there.
 
Malaysia says Australia's immigration system encourages visa rorting
BY POLITICAL REPORTER JACKSON GOTHE-SNAPE AND SASTRA WIJAYAUPDATED ABOUT 2 HOURS AGO
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PHOTO
Malaysia's parliament has been discussing why so many residents are seeking protection in Australia.
SUPPLIED: ENGIN AKYURT
Australia's immigration policies, including free flights home for people who overstay their visa, have contributed to a rise of Malaysians rorting the local visa system, according to the Malaysian Government.
Key points:
  • Malaysian parliament hears that Malaysians have been using protection visas as an "excuse" to stay longer in Australia
  • Thousands of Malaysians have come to Australia using an online visa as a tourist then applied for protection in recent years
  • By appealing a visa rejection, this group can extend their stay in Australia, then get flown home for free
Deputy Foreign Minister Marzuki Yahya told Malaysia's Parliament on Tuesday that Malaysians received "light punishment" for breaching visa conditions in Australia, given they were flown back without being charged for the flight.
The ABC reported on Wednesday of the"orchestrated scam" of Malaysians arriving in Australia on a tourist visa then staying for years while seeking a protection visa.
Mr Yahya said Malaysians were drawn to Australia due to higher wages, the low cost of applying for a protection visa and the "world-class" education system — and not because they were being persecuted at home.
"The action of Malaysians in applying for protection visas on the pretext that their lives are in danger if they continue to stay in Malaysia is seen as an excuse to stay longer in the country," he said.
The trend of Malaysians arriving in Australia then applying for a protection visa has been increasing.
About 1,400 protection visa lodgements came from Malaysians while they were in Australia in 2014-15. By last year, annual lodgements had grown to 9,300.
'A sovereign, orderly immigration system'
Countering the criticism, Immigration Minister David Coleman said less than 0.25 per cent of people who come to Australia on temporary visas apply for protection.
"The vast majority of those applicants are refused — 95 per cent last year. Unsuccessful applicants are required to return home," he said.
"This Government has a strong record on protecting our borders and maintaining a sovereign, orderly immigration system."
The Malaysian High Commission did not respond to requests for comment.
At the end of 2018, of approximately 10,000 electronic visa holders who had overstayed their visa, three quarters were from Malaysia.
Jason Wood, the new Minister for Multicultural Affairs, speaking in February before he took on that role, said the Malaysian visitors were making a bid to work around existing visa laws.
"This represents an orchestrated scam that provides protection visa applicants the right to work in Australia until their claims are finalised."​
A parliamentary committee, which Mr Wood chaired in February, recommended that electronic visa holders who lodged a protection visa application be "fast-tracked" and have limited rights to appeal.
The Government is yet to respond to those recommendations.
Last week, leading UK politician and prime minister aspirant Boris Johnson praised Australia's points-based immigration system and US President Donald Trump tweeted his admiration of Australia's border policies.
POSTED ABOUT 4 HOURS AGO
 
Of course, we must also question, if these are mostly bona fide malaysians seeking protection. Or humsn trafickers using malaysian passport to get someone from third country into australia.
 
Forget boat people, refugees arriving at airports are ‘gaming the system’ on a grand scale




David Hardaker

9 hrs ago

The man sitting opposite us says he has found happiness. He lives in a small rented room in an outer Sydney suburb. He works a 60-hour week in a low-paid maintenance job from which he could be fired at any minute. He travels three hours a day on trains and buses to get there. He has no Medicare cover should he get sick. And it’s a whole lot better than where he came from.
We’ll call him Raymond (we can’t use his real name, for reasons which will become obvious). He arrived at an Australian airport from Malaysia four years ago on a tourist visa. Within a month he applied for refugee status. His claim — that he feared religious persecution back home — was not believed by assessors from the Department of Home Affairs. He lodged an appeal against the department’s decision, as is his right. But more than two years later he still doesn’t have a hearing date. The odds are that his appeal will fail, but in the meantime he’s got the protection of a bridging visa. This means he can remain in Australia and work until his legal avenues run out.
Raymond’s is one of more than 20,000 cases listed as “active” at the Administrative Appeals Tribunal (AAT). The tribunal puts its clearance rate of refugee cases at 38%. A year ago there were 14,000 cases. Since then, the appeals have poured into the tribunal at the rate of around 250 new cases every week. And the more cases there are, the longer it takes to clear them.


The scam
Gaming the system has proven remarkably simple in a country that proudly parades its “tough-on-borders” credentials to the world. Raymond is happy to show INQ how it’s done. He opens his phone and taps into a private Facebook group run by a man called Jebat Joe, a Malaysian national who oversees the Australian end of a labour recruitment syndicate.
AAEEOe4.img
© Provided by Private Media Operations Pty Ltd.
Jebat Joe has nine tips on how to get through customs for anyone who arrives on a tourist visa at an Australian airport and hopes to stay permanently:
  • Don’t bring big suitcases and say you are only in Australia for one week’s holiday. Travel light.
  • Don’t appear nervous or scared.
  • Wear neat clothing. Don’t look messy.
  • Delete all data and contacts in your phone regarding work in Australia.
  • Don’t bring too little money for a holiday.
  • Have a return ticket.
  • Not having a hotel booking is a problem. Have a booking for one day at least.
  • On your declaration card say that you are coming for a holiday and that you don’t have any personal contacts in Australia.
  • Don’t ever say you are coming to Australia to work. If your English is no good use two phrases: “I want holiday” and “I have money”.
Jebat Joe underlines the importance of appearance. A major reason people don’t get into Australia is that they “don’t have good clothes”. Ladies, he said, should “dress like a diva”.
Jebat Joe is part of a larger system that has paved the way — at a price — for thousands of Malaysians to make money in Australia, a step taken more often than not out of necessity.
Next, Raymond shows INQ the online site of a man known as Zed, who worked in Australia but has returned to Malaysia. Zed works alongside Jebat Joe to recruit Malaysians looking for work in Australia. Anyone seeking a job must pay a minimum fee of $300. In Australia, Jebat Joe’s operation does deals with contractors who are looking for workers, and his operation takes a percentage of the total labour cost. It’s a scheme that mostly operates through closed Facebook or WhatsApp groups.
AAEEIYp.img
© Provided by Private Media Operations Pty Ltd.
Raymond has barely travelled outside Sydney, yet his knowledge of Australian regions and their fruit produce is vast. He’s able to recite it flawlessly: “Coffs Harbour, blueberry. Robinvale, oranges and grapes. Cairns/Mareeba, mango. Darwin, mango. Perth, strawberry. Mildura, oranges.”
Raymond has gleaned his knowledge from job notices posted on sites like “Kerja di Australia” (“Work in Australia”). At the time of writing, the website has a callout for blueberry picking jobs in Coffs Harbour.
Raymond has a wide circle of Malaysian friends who, like him, entered on a tourist visa. Most have made a living working on Australian farms while, like Raymond, they wait for the system to decide on their refugee application. For those working on a farm there’s a strict protocol, he says. “They don’t talk to the farmer, and the farmer does not talk to them,” explained Raymond. “The farmer only deals with the [labour] contractor.”
In the world of Malaysian farm labourers, the contractor — who might be Malaysian but equally could be Indonesian, Chinese, or Lebanese — holds the whip hand, according to Raymond. Workers are paid in cash, usually every two weeks.
“If the contractor wants to play bastard he will call immigration. Then immigration will come and the employees won’t get paid,” said Raymond.“They don’t think they’ll be caught, only if the contractor calls immigration.”
The Malaysian visa scam began on a small scale but escalated five years ago and is controlled by syndicates in Malaysia. In Australia, gaming the system relies on a legal framework that guarantees a fair hearing for anyone with a claim for asylum. At the centre of that system is the AAT, which has been driven to a state of virtual meltdown. These are the numbers:
  • In July 2016, there were 17,480 cases at the tribunal’s migration and refugee division — by May 2019, that number had grown to 58,442.
  • In 2014-15, the AAT received 8587 applications for onshore protection visas (asylum) — by 2017-18 the number stood at 27,931.
  • Applications from Malaysians in that period grew from 1401 to 9319.
  • The average time to process an application is now 600 days.
Those statistics sound horrific, but the long waiting times are very good for business. Abul Rizvi, a former deputy secretary of the Immigration Department, says this state of dysfunction is exactly what labour-hire syndicates need: “It’s not much use bringing a worker out to Australia and only having them for a week. They need a worker to stay for years to keep making money from them,” he told INQ.
“The beauty of it, is that it is completely legal for those on a bridging visa to work,” Rizvi explained. “The visa system, and by implication our borders, have never been so out of control.”
The legal facade
The AAT tries hard to present a personable face. Its waiting area is a pastiche of comforting blues, greys and wood tones. Furnishings are soft. Edges are rounded. Carpet takes the edge off any sharp sounds. There are open areas for families. Small niches for confidential chats. Closed door rooms for those receiving bad news.
On the day INQ visits, a cheerful young tribunal officer emerges from behind the reception desk with armfuls of books and toys to keep the children of a Bangladeshi family entertained. The AAT might be a judicial body, but it seems the very opposite of imposing bureaucracy.
Within the AAT system there’s a special place for people seeking asylum, or as it is officially known, a “protection visa”. Every applicant’s case is confidential. In the daily register, asylum cases are anonymous. The only clue is a figure who might emerge briefly from a lift and disappear quietly into an unmarked hearing room.
Reporters can attend most AAT hearings, but not asylum cases. When the AAT issues its final decision, there’s nothing to identify the applicant: no name, date of birth or family details. The system offers total and complete anonymity, geared for those — and their families back home — who face torture or death, among other threats.
Last year, the AAT found that only 8% of cases were indeed genuine refugees. Lawyer Simon Jeans — who knows how the visa appeal system works from the inside after spending five years hearing and ruling on refugee claims at the Migration Review Tribunal (since merged with the AAT), and before that 20 years working alongside asylum seekers from Vietnam, Iraq and Iran, to name a few — says you can sniff when a claim is false.
“It’s quite easy to identify,” he said. “You ask a question like ‘tell me about why you left your country’ and you get a very vague answer. There’s lots of that in the system. I think I had a rejection rate of about 90%. It was dispiriting. It was very hard to find a refugee.”
Jeans uses an insider’s term for those who claim asylum after arriving at Australia’s airports: “Jumbo people” (as in the 747, to distinguish them from the boat people). And the hallmarks of a dodgy claim are, to him, obvious. “The Malaysians have a pro forma system because they have agents helping them. So they put in the same claims. They usually say they’re the victim of a loan shark (back in Malaysia) or they are homosexual.” Jeans explained that the fear of violence at the hands of a loan shark became a popular argument after a tribunal member ruled in favour of it in one case.
“The applicants have the same address for correspondence, which is used by the organised groups behind it. So it becomes obvious when you’ve got large numbers all apparently at the same PO box.” What’s more, said Jeans, Malaysian applicants “rarely turned up to a hearing”. When that happens, their application is refused.
But it doesn’t necessarily end there, because it’s possible to appeal an AAT decision to the Federal Circuit Court. So the AAT’s problem is also fast becoming the Federal Court’s problem. Simon Jeans points to Melbourne and an AAT refugee appeal lodged in July this year, which will have a preliminary hearing in March 2022. The final hearing may be another year or two later — “this can give an applicant a guaranteed four to five years with permission to work and Medicare, with the possibility of further time to stay and work by remaining as an unlawful non-citizen,” he said.
Now back practising as an immigration lawyer, he said “the real disaster” is that other general migration cases such as Family and Partner visas are now delayed in the AAT by one to two years, leaving individuals and families in limbo.
The Malaysian applicants, too, have a price to pay. “The people smugglers in Malaysia have got a whole industry set up for this,” said John Hourigan who heads the Migration Institute of Australia, the professional association for migration agents. “They can take it through the entire system. So you get here. Then they take you to see someone to put your claim together. And then someone else. The whole thing moves through like a sausage factory. The Malaysians are paying exorbitant money at every stage to these unscrupulous operators. They’ve been abused time and time again by everyone.”
The meltdown of the AAT system is a crucial part of the rapid growth in the numbers of temporary migrant workers in Australia. According to figures from the Department of Home Affairs, the number of people on bridging visas has been increasing exponentially. In 2014 it was 107,000. By 2018, the number was just shy of 200,000 — a large, highly exploitable group.
This giant malfunction in the system has created a “honeypot attracting people smugglers” who abuse the onshore processing system, according to Rizvi. It has been a problem years in the making which would cost the government “perhaps billions” to fix.
Assuming, of course, that anyone really wants to fix it.

https://www.msn.com/en-au/news/aust...m-on-a-grand-scale/ar-AAEEOe6?ocid=spartanntp
 
Bridging visa 'blow out' now bigger than Hobart and Government expects it to keep growing
By political reporter Jackson Gothe-Snape
Updated about 4 hours ago

PHOTO: The horticulture industry is reliant on Malaysian workers according to a report. (Supplied: University of Adelaide)
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The number of people in Australia waiting for a visa decision has swelled to a size equivalent to the population of Hobart.

Key points:
  • The number of people in Australia on bridging visas has more than doubled in the past five years
  • Experts wonder what impact this new influx of workers is having on the labour market
  • Migrants appear to be taking advantage of delays to stay in Australia longer


According to the Department of Home Affairs, 229,000 people on bridging visas were in Australia in March. Hobart's population at the latest census was 222,000.

And a new report has identified the impact of this group on the labour market for the first time.

The Committee for Economic Development of Australia (CEDA) analysed the census to find this group had an unemployment rate of about 20 per cent.

That is high compared to the Australian average, but it still means four in five who were looking for work were working — equivalent to many tens of thousands in the labour force.

A migrant is granted a bridging visa when one visa has expired but they are still waiting for their new visa application to be finalised.

Processing times for visas and the number of migration-related court appeals have increased in recent years. These prompt delays, meaning more people remain on bridging visas.

Melinda Cilento, chief executive of CEDA, said that temporary migrants had improved Australia's prosperity overall, though the growth in bridging visas did warrant closer inspection.

"The community's looking at that and wondering how well the system's working and is it actually working the way that we want it to work," she said.

"Many of these people on bridging visas still have working rights — that's also a question the community will be asking: Is this the outcome we're looking for?"

Senator Linda Reynolds, representing the Home Affairs Ministers, told the Senate on Tuesday that the growth in bridging visas was caused by increased arrivals generally and she anticipated further growth.

"As numbers increase, of course you will get an increase in all sorts of categories of people arriving, and making claims to stay," she said.

"So you would expect that number to grow merely by the fact of the amount of people who come here by air."

Behind the growth
A recent parliamentary committee highlighted the growing trend for Malaysians arriving in Australia on a tourist visa then applying for asylum.

In June 2014, just 7 per cent of Malaysians temporarily in Australia were on bridging visas, according to Department of Home Affairs figures.

By March this year, the share had risen to 34 per cent.

EMBED: The rise of bridging visas


Now more Malaysians are on bridging visas than on any other visa, even the popular subclass 500 student visa.

But it is not just an issue with the Malaysian group — the number of bridging visas has increased for most nationalities.

Peter McDonald, a professor in demography at the University of Melbourne, said the bridging visa cohort had "blown out" and was now "enormous compared to any past history".

"For a long time the numbers on bridging visas were seen as an indicator of the government's efficiency in processing applications because the vast majority of people on bridging visas are applying for permanent residence," he said.

He said the growth was due not only to the growing number of people arriving by plane then claiming asylum — such as the group of Malaysians identified — but also the lengthening queue for partner visas.

"Normally, in the past, [spouses] get their permanent residency immediately," Professor McDonald said.

"But the Government has now introduced a long delay in that process, and there are now about 80,000 spouses of Australian citizens waiting for their permanent residence."

Senator Reynolds said on Tuesday the Government was taking "appropriate steps" to deal with airline arrivals.

She said there had been a 32 per cent decline in the number of protection visa applications from Malaysians in the first five months of 2019 compared to the same period in 2018. Across all nationalities, the decline was 20 per cent.

Labour market impact
A separate report from the University of Adelaide released in March found the horticulture sector was reliant on Malaysian workers, but also that workers were vulnerable to exploitation.

As part of a series of interviews, it reported one stakeholder saying "the Malaysians … are the ones who are exploited".

"When you know there's Malaysians on a farm, very few of them could be legal," the stakeholder said.​
A labour hire contractor was reported to have said Malaysians "just use the visitor visa to come to Australia and they stay longer than three months and just work in Australia, and that's what happens … they are very hard workers and then they become illegal people".

Malaysians can travel to Australia on an official tourist visa obtained online.

Australian border officials are refusing entry to 20 Malaysians at Australian airports every week, to address what has been dubbed an "orchestrated scam".

The working holiday maker or 'backpacker' visa, the most popular low-skill visa in Australia, is not available to Malaysians.

Immigration Minister David Coleman did not respond to requests for comment.
 
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