UNHCR Not Best Pleased With NZ Immigration Bill
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The UNHCR regional representative Richard Towle
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Concern about how New Zealand was balancing security concerns vs humanitarian ones was raised by the United Nations High
Commissioner for Refugees regional representative today.
Oral submissions regarding New Zealand's latest update of Immigration law were being heard today by members of the
Transport and Industrial Relations select committee.
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Richard Towle the UNHCR representative for Australia and NZ was over from Canberra to speak to the committee regarding
the UNHCR's submission - a submission that contained a number of concerns at the balance between a states right to
protect its borders and humanitarian objectives.
Of paramount concern to Mr Towle was a new section in the Immigration Bill that would see potential asylum seekers
shunted out of NZ to a potentially safe third country. Mr Towle pointed out that while this system may work in a group
of states bound together such as the European Union it was much more likely to see potential refugees shunted back to
countries that do not have the same humanitarian concerns as New Zealand or Australia (ie a number of South East Asian
states).
While at the committee Mr Towle was engaged for some time in a conversation with New Zealand First's Peter Brown.
Mr Brown who is himself an immigrant from the United Kingdom was concerned that New Zealand could be inundated with
people who had been declared refugees in other countries. In the opinion of the UNHCR representative it was unlikely
that people adjudged a refugee by say France could arrive in NZ and say 'Hey, I don't really like speaking French – can
I be a refugee in NZ'.
Listen to Mr Towle's full oral submission
Read the UNHCR's full submission on New Zealand's latest Immigration Bill (2007)
ENDS