Sri Lankan girl receives temporary visa after Australian Minister intervenes

Sri Lankan girl receives temporary visa after Australian Minister intervenes

February 12, 2016   02:02 pm

A Sri Lankan girl who made headlines after being refused a temporary visa because she has Down syndrome will be allowed to live in Australia, after Immigration Minister Peter Dutton intervened in her case.

Eliza Fonseka, nine, also found an unexpected ally in former Australian cricket captain Greg Chappell, who advocated for her to be granted the visa.

“I’m very excited for Eliza, I’m very excited for the family,” said Chappell, who was approached to help Eliza’s family by her father, a cricket coach.

“I think in this case compassion has won out.”

Chappell said it was the first time he had been involved in an immigration issue.

“Probably in this particular style, yes, but through the years I’ve been approached to support a few things and where I thought it worthy, I’ve been more than happy to support the cause,” Chappell said.

“I thought [this] was a very worthy cause.”

Eliza’s parents want to work in a Christian crisis centre in remote Western Australia.

The Immigration Department last year issued them a temporary work visa but Eliza was not granted a visa because the Immigration Department said she was considered to be a “significant cost to the Australian community in the areas of health care”.

That decision caused outrage in disability advocacy circles.

Eliza’s father Angelo Fonseka said the Immigration Minister’s decision comes after 11 months of fighting for his daughter.

“We are so happy and excited,” Mr Fonseka said.

“I was overjoyed and I couldn’t talk.

“Myself and my sponsors were emotionally overjoyed and we thank God.”

Mr Fonseka said his daughter was in good health and not on medication, and the family had Australian private health insurance to cover any medical costs.

She has been granted a Temporary Work visa, which is valid until December this year.

Down Syndrome Australia chairman Angus Graham said he was “thrilled” with the Minister’s decision.

But he said there was still a discrepancy between the Disability Discrimination Act and the Migration Act.

“Inconsistencies and discrimination still exist for people trying to migrate to Australia,” Mr Graham said.

The Fonseka family plans to move to Shark Bay, 800 kilometres north of Perth, to work at a Christian crisis centre that provides food, accommodation and support to people in need.

Eliza will attend school in the small town that sits in a World Heritage Area in the Gascoyne region.

Mr Fonseka also thanked the Federal Government, West Australian Premier Colin Barnett, Down Syndrome Australia and the National Ethnic Disability Alliance for their support.

Source: ABC

-Agencies

Disclaimer: All the comments will be moderated by the AD editorial. Abstain from posting comments that are obscene, defamatory or slanderous. Please avoid outside hyperlinks inside the comment and avoid typing all capitalized comments. Help us delete comments that do not follow these guidelines by flagging them(mouse over a comment and click the flag icon on the right side). Do use these forums to voice your opinions and create healthy discourse.

Most Viewed Video Stories

Palitha Thewarapperuma: Country bids farewell to beloved politician & 'man of the people'

Palitha Thewarapperuma: Country bids farewell to beloved politician & 'man of the people'

Election body says it cannot intervene to resolve SLFP’s infighting (English)

President pledged to nurture budding entrepreneurs through regional youth centres (English)

Ambitious program Sri Lanka embarked upon is now delivering results: IMF (English)

Former MP Palitha Thewarapperuma's final rites to be performed today (English)

LIVE🔴Ada Derana Prime Time News Bulletin 6.55 pm

LIVE🔴Ada Derana Lunch Time News Bulletin 12.00 pm

Injunction issued preventing Maithripala from functioning as SLFP chairman extended