Gulf News

Australia urged not to deport autistic Filipino boy

Mother and son had been denied permission to stay longer as they are ‘burden’ to taxpayers

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A10-year-old autistic Filipino boy made an emotional plea yesterday for permission to stay in Australia, as tens of thousands called for him not to be deported despite the potential cost of his condition.

Tyrone Sevilla, who arrived in Australia from the Philippine­s legally as a two-year-old with his mother Maria Sevilla, has written to Immigratio­n Minister Peter Dutton asking to stay.

The letter, which reads: “Dear Mr Dutton, can I stay in Australia please ... Tyrone,” was the first one her son had written and probably the most important he would ever write, Maria said.

“With our help, he managed to sit down and write all those letters on the page. For him to sit down and do that, it’s a different Tyrone,” she told AFP.

Maria Sevilla said the letter showed her son, who does not normally communicat­e by speaking, understood the family’s situation after they were denied visas due to the probable cost of providing for Tyrone’s care.

“I think he knows what’s going on,” she said.

Maria, who has been in Australia since 2007 on a variety of visas, said she and her son had been denied permission to stay longer because they were labelled a “burden” to Australian taxpayers. The Sevillas presented a petition, signed by more than 120,000 people, to Dutton’s electoral office in Brisbane in the hope that the minister would give compassion­ate considerat­ion to their cause.

The family said Tyrone did not speak Filipino or have any close relatives remaining in the Philippine­s, with his grandmothe­r, grandfathe­r, uncle, aunt and cousins all living in the Australian city of Townsville.

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