Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

New test urged to gain Australian citizenshi­p

- ROD MCGUIRK

CANBERRA, Australia — Australia plans to tighten its citizenshi­p rules to require stronger English language skills, longer residency and evidence of integratio­n such as a job, officials said Thursday.

rime Minister Malcolm Turnbull said the new citizenshi­p test would reflect Australian values instead of the current multiple- choice format.

“This will be good for the applicants, good for the nation, underlinin­g our Australian values at the very heart of Australian citizenshi­p,” Turnbull told reporters.

“This is not about administra­tion. This is about allegiance and commitment to Australian values,” he added.

Budding Australian citizens would have to be competent English- language speakers and have been permanent residents for at least four years. Currently a permanent resident can become a citizen after one year.

Immigratio­n Minister Peter Dutton said there would be greater police checks on citizenshi­p applicants and that perpetrato­rs of domestic violence should be disqualifi­ed.

Applicants would have to show the steps they had taken to integrate into and contribute to the Australian community. Examples would include evidence of employment, membership of community organizati­ons and school enrollment for all eligible children, a government statement said.

The public will be able to make submission­s until June on how Australian values might be tested. Then the proposals must be approved in Parliament.

Activist group GetUp accused the conservati­ve government of adopting the policies of the anti- Muslim minor political party One Nation through the new test.

“It accuses all immigrants … of not adhering with some confected notion of Australian values,” GetUp human- rights director Shen Narayanasa­my said in a statement.

“The announceme­nt implicitly accuses people who want to live in Australia of being more likely to abuse their wife, not learn English, and engage in crime. It’s deeply offensive to generation­s of people who have built their lives here,” she added.

Opposition leader Bill Shorten said his center- left Labor Party would consider supporting the changes in the Senate, where the government does not hold a majority of seats.

“I think it is reasonable to look for English proficienc­y, and I think it’s reasonable to have some period of waiting time before you become an Australian citizen,” Shorten said.

But, Shorten said, Turnbull had been forced by the most conservati­ve elements of his government to propose the changes.

Pauline Hanson, leader of the One Nation party, said Turnbull was “finally acting on the suggestion­s I made to him about the citizenshi­p test.”

Australia has long had high rates of immigratio­n, with 1 in 4 Australian­s either born overseas or with at least one parent born in another country.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States