Tense wait for Biloela Tamil family ahead of 'full and final' deportation hearing

A Tamil family desperate to remain in Australia won't be kicked out of the country for now, after the Federal Court gave them more time for their legal fight.

A Tamil family desperate to remain in Australia won't be kicked out of the country for now, after the Federal Court gave them more time for their legal fight.

A Tamil family desperate to remain in Australia won't be kicked out of the country for now, after the Federal Court gave them more time for their legal fight. Source: AAP

A Tamil family fighting to stay in Australia have woken up in the nation again, after the Federal Court ruled they could stay at least another 12 days.

The family, who settled in the Queensland town of Biloela before being taken into detention, could have been deported on Friday afternoon,
An earlier photo of the detained Tamil family from Biloela.
Priya and Nadesalingam and their two children were happily living in Biloela in central Queensland. Source: Supplied
Justice Mordy Bromberg made a ruling in Melbourne on Friday restraining the government from forcibly removing the family - who are detained on Christmas Island - until an interlocutory hearing.

The family could remain in detention for months if the matter goes to afor which a date has not yet been set.

Their legal case hinges on two-year-old Tharunicaa Murugappan and her right to apply for a protection visa, amid claims she would be subjected to "serious harm" in Sri Lanka.
Supporter's of the Biloela Tamil asylum seeker family gather outside of the Federal Court in Melbourne.
Supporter's of the Biloela Tamil asylum seeker family gather outside of the Federal Court in Melbourne, Wednesday, September 4, 2019. Source: AAP
Despite being Australian-born, Tharunicaa has been deemed an "unauthorised maritime arrival" under the Migration Act, which stipulates children of asylum seekers who arrive in the country by boat cannot apply for a visa.

A succession of courts have ruled her parents Priya and Nades and four-year-old sister Kopika are not refugees and do not qualify for Australia's protection.

Speaking outside court, the family's lawyer Carina Ford said there was still hope an agreement could be reached, preferably without the family being sent back to Sri Lanka to apply for visas.

Home Affairs Minister Peter Dutton has ruled out using his discretionary powers to allow the family to stay, claiming "the boats will restart" if he does.
Home Affairs Minister Peter Dutton.
Home Affairs Minister Peter Dutton. Source: AAP
His government this week revealed the boats never stopped coming, with six fleeing Sri Lanka in recent months.

Labor Senator Kristina Keneally says Mr Dutton has used his discretionary powers more than 4000 times.

"This government doesn't hesitate to use its discretion ... when it suits them," she said.


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Published 7 September 2019 8:32am
Updated 22 February 2022 6:20pm
Source: SBS News


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