Source: MIL-OSI Submissions
Source: International Center for Advocates Against Discrimination (ICAAD)
● Repeal parts of the Immigration Act 2009 which prohibit immigration-related complaints
to the Human Rights Commission; and provide a pathway for filing discrimination complaints;
● Remove sections of the Acceptable Standard of Health (ASH) policy that reference disability as imposing prohibitive costs;
● Remove a section of the ASH medical waiver policy so that, should disability remain on the list of cost-prohibitive medical conditions, it at least be removed from the list of excluded circumstances for medical waivers; and
● Track reasons for declining residency applications specifically under health and disability grounds.
Notes:
● Report Recommendations:
1. Repeal Section 392 para. (2) and (3) of the Immigration Act 2009. Para. 2 prohibits immigration-related complaints to the Human Rights Commission which limits national avenues for redress related to discrimination. Para. 3 provides an pathway for explicit discrimination, stating “immigration matters inherently involve different treatment on the basis of personal characteristics.”
2. Remove sections of the Acceptable Standard of Health (ASH) policy (A4.10.1) relating to disability. New Zealand has stated their distinction between health and disability in the state party report, yet immigration policy still explicitly discriminates against persons with disabilities. We are encouraged by the removal of HIV infection from the list of medical conditions imposing prohibitive costs, and we urge New Zealand to similarly remove disability related impairment.
3. Remove the carve out for “physical, intellectual, cognitive and/or sensory incapacity that requires full time care, including care in the community…” in the ASH medical waiver policy (A4.60). Should disability remain on the list of medical conditions deemed to impose too significant a cost, it should be removed from the list of excluded circumstances for medical waivers (section A, iii).
4. Reduce or eliminate application fees under the Pacific Access Category. Given that the scheme falls under the “international/ humanitarian visa stream”, the application fee should either be greatly reduced or eliminated in order to better support applicants planning to settle in New Zealand.
About Fusi Alofa Association Tuvalu:
Fusi Alofa Association Tuvalu (Fusi Alofa) is the only umbrella Disabled Person’s Organization in Tuvalu. Fusi Alofa was established in May 2009 and was finally registered as a non-government organisation (NGO) in June 2012. Fusi Alofa strives to be the leading advocacy organisation on disability related issues in Tuvalu. Fusi Alofa also values its partnerships working on disability issues like the Tuvalu Red Cross Society, Department of Community Affairs (Social Welfare), Secretariat of the Pacific Community/Regional Rights Resource Team (SPC/RRRT), etc.
About TuCAN:
Tuvalu Climate Action Network (TuCAN) was set up in response to the urgent need for a global commitment to reduce warming to well below dangerous levels and the equally urgent need to raise awareness on, adapt to climate change and implement clean energy in Tuvalu. It is a nationwide network that will be responsible for being the voice of all non
government organisations in Tuvalu on climate change, working to coordinate and implement climate change activities and issues that are of direct relevance to non government organisations.
ICAAD is a human rights advocacy center working at the intersection of legal innovation and human-centered design to create evidence-based programs with multidisciplinary partners to combat structural discrimination. They see the law and design justice as crucial lenses in identifying and changing discriminatory systems. Guided by international
human rights law, we locate and approach human rights violations by identifying pattern and practices of discrimination within various government and cultural systems.