Malta Independent

Man loses visa fight, faces deportatio­n to Malta, 61 years after arriving in Australia

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A convicted drug trafficker being held on Christmas Island faces deportatio­n to his native Malta after losing a High Court bid to have his visa reinstated.

A convicted drug trafficker, who migrated to Australia as a toddler in 1956, could be deported to Malta after losing a High Court appeal to have his visa reinstated.

Sixty-six-year-old John Falzon migrated with his parents and never became an Australian citizen.

In 2008, he pleaded guilty to cannabis traffickin­g and served eight years in jail.

At the end of his sentence, his visa was cancelled on character grounds and he was placed in immigratio­n detention.

He is currently being held on Christmas Island.

Falzon argued in the High Court that he’d served his time for his crime and ejecting him from Australia was an attempt to punish him further.

But in a unanimous decision the High Court dismissed that argument.

The court found the immigratio­n minister must cancel a visa held by a person if the minister was satisfied that they failed the character test because of a substantia­l criminal record.

His applicatio­n was dismissed with costs.

Falzon’s family in Australia includes two sisters, four brothers, four adult children and ten grandchild­ren, Greg Dyett reported on SBS News.

One of his sisters, Ann Falzon told SBS News the family is devastated.

“All comes down to he’s got to go back to Malta. He came here when he was three-years-old, like he doesn’t even know anybody over there. They’re just going to dump him in Malta and leave him and what’s he going to do, he’s got no money, he’s got nobody over there, we’re all here,” she said.

She said her brother has paid a high price for his drug traffickin­g.

“We’ve been waiting already how many years and we just get let down after let down. All this is over his marijuana. He grew a bit of marijuana and they locked him up for 8 years and now he’s been in detention for three years. He just wanted to come home.”

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