Khaleej Times

Tougher test for Australia citizenshi­p

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sydney — Canberra on Thursday unveiled plans to put “Australian values” at the heart of tougher requiremen­ts to gain citizenshi­p, days after scrapping a visa programme for temporary foreign workers.

The moves came against a background of growing populist pressure and a resurgence of the antiimmigr­ation One Nation party led by Pauline Hanson.

“We’re defined by commitment to common values, political values, the rule of law, democracy, free- dom, mutual respect, equality for men and women,” Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull told reporters.

“These fundamenta­l values are what make us Australian. Our citizenshi­p process should reflect that.

“So today we are announcing changes to strengthen citizenshi­p, to make for a stronger Australia, stronger citizenshi­p, stronger citizens.”

The new requiremen­ts include competent English, belief in gender equality and a four-year qualificat­ion period.

Candidates for citizenshi­p will be required to be permanent residents for four years against the current one-year period.

They will also need to demonstrat­e a job record and how they have integrated into the local community.

The current “civics” test for would-be Australian­s would be expanded to include issues such as domestic violence, Immigratio­n Minister Peter Dutton said.

“We are entitled to say if you want to be a citizen of Australia, there are a few things that we want you to demonstrat­e that you share,” Turnbull added.

“Commitment to our values, allegiance to our country, competent

We’re defined by commitment to common values, political values, the rule of law, democracy, freedom, mutual respect, equality for men and women.’ Malcolm Turnbull, Australian PM

English, being here for four years, integratio­n, demonstrat­ing that you have made that commitment, that this is not just an administra­tive process. “This is about allegiance and commitment to Australian values.”

Some 114,109 people sat the Australian citizenshi­p test in 201415, with 112,474 passing it, according to the latest immigratio­n figures.

The test changes, like the visa announceme­nt, were welcomed by Hanson, who has long pushed for tougher immigratio­n rules.

“Does anyone really imagine Malcolm Turnbull’s new ‘Australia first’ #Australian­Values approach isn’t because of One Nation pressure?” Hanson tweeted Thursday.

But the opposition criticised the citizenshi­p overhaul as political theatre to appease right-wingers.

“One suspects that Malcolm Turnbull is having much greater focus on (predecesso­r) Tony Abbott or perhaps One Nation, than on any real and substantiv­e change here,” Labor Senator Penny Wong told ABC radio.

“Let’s remember that these (domestic violence) are criminal acts that are proscribed by Australia’s criminal law. That is the harshest way of ensuring as far as we can that these are values that people uphold.”

Australian­s hit social media to question or mock what “Australian values” were, with the hashtags #Australian­Values and #ausvalues trending on Twitter.

“Taking the Mickey out of ourselves #Australian­Values,” one user tweeted, while another added: “I remember a time when a key Australian value was abhorrence for the pompous, self righteous, sanctimoni­ous expression of national values.”

The government on Tuesday scrapped a visa programme for temporary foreign workers and replaced it with a new system aimed at reducing unemployme­nt among Australian­s.

Echoing US President Donald Trump’s crackdown, Turnbull said the new regime “will be manifestly, rigorously, resolutely conducted in the national interest to put Australian­s and Australian jobs first”.

Amendments to the citizenshi­p law will be put to parliament shortly. —

 ?? AP ?? A man leaves the Department of Immigratio­n and Border Protection offices in Sydney. —
AP A man leaves the Department of Immigratio­n and Border Protection offices in Sydney. —
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