‘Serious concerns’ rights undercut in migration changes

Australia’s Human Rights Commission warned that the Labor Party’s proposal to change the rules of migration will solve the right to a fair legal process from foreign criminals who cannot be deported.
Interior Minister Tony Burke quietly brought Parliament a bill to Parliament, a bill of law, which was trying to deport the natural government to the former immigration rules for former immigration.
The legislation caused the government to be released from the government in 2023 because a Supreme Court’s decision, which decided that uncertain detention was illegal and that hundreds of convicted criminals could not be deported to their origin countries.
The Commission said that proposed changes may weaken human rights and violate Australia’s international obligations.
Human Rights Commissioner Lorraine Finlay said that changes have eliminated one of the most basic legal protections of a fair society.
“Procedural justice, the cornerstones of our legal system and a protection against error,” he said.
“Instead of a patchwork of reactive answers, we must provide principled migration and asylum policies that protect the integrity of the Australia’s migration system while supporting our human rights obligations.”
Introducing the bill, Burke said that procedural justice is a fundamental principle, but it was used to “delay their abolition and disappoint” costing the taxpayer by foreigners.
“These provisions are primarily directed to all legitimate ways to stay in Australia and to non -citizens who are the only result of the Australian laws.” He said.
Opposition leader Sussan Ley, at the beginning of this week parliament’s legislation “rush, hidden and chaotic,” he said.
“Four years later, immigration policies are still escaping to this Workers’ Government.” He said.
He continued: “Is this legislation closing the gaps that need to close the gaps on the previous invoices? What is happening on earth?”


