New Zealand Tightens Immigration Rules Amid Global Push
New Zealand's government is set to tighten deportation, asylum, and immigration rules, extending deportation liabilities, increasing penalties for migrant exploitation, and enhancing enforcement powers. The bill reflects a global trend towards stricter immigration systems and aims to ensure fairness and effectiveness while preventing abuse and serious criminal activity.
- Country:
- New Zealand
On Wednesday, the New Zealand government plans to introduce legislation to bolster deportation, asylum, and immigration enforcement measures. The changes address serious offenses, migrant exploitation, and frivolous claims, according to Immigration Minister Erica Stanford.
The proposed bill would extend the deportation liability period for residents from 10 to 20 years if convicted of serious crimes. Additionally, it raises the maximum sentence for migrant exploitation from seven to ten years and broadens authorities' powers over false information during immigration processes. With a governing majority, the bill is expected to pass the required parliamentary readings.
This legislative move mirrors a global effort to reinforce immigration systems under growing political pressure. Proposed alongside the bill is a paper advocating for asylum reforms that consider severe crimes committed before granting refugee status. Stanford emphasized that 14 refugee claimants with serious convictions are influencing these policy changes aimed at preserving public trust in the refugee system.
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