The Sun (Malaysia)

Dual citizenshi­p crisis

> Aussie deputy premier may not be eligible for parliament

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SYDNEY: The political future of Australian Deputy Prime Minister Barnaby Joyce ( pix) was in doubt yesterday after it emerged he was a dual citizen, placing the conservati­ve government’s slim parliament­ary majority at risk.

Australia does not allow dual citizens to sit in parliament, with New Zealand confirming later yesterday its citizenshi­p was automatica­lly granted to Joyce via his father.

The revelation has major implicatio­ns for Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull’s LiberalNat­ional coalition government, which won national elections last year with 76 seats in the House of Representa­tives – a narrow oneseat majority.

Joyce has refused to step aside, instead referring the case to the High Court, saying that the solicitor-general was confident he would not be disqualifi­ed.

The obscure rule was little known until recently but several lawmakers have fallen victim to it in recent months, leaving parliament­arians scrambling to clarify their ancestral ties.

“Needless to say, I was shocked to receive this informatio­n,” Joyce told parliament after hearing he may be a dual citizen.

“I’ve always been an Australian citizen born in (regional city) Tamworth. Neither me or my parents had any reason to believe that I may be a citizen of any other country.”

The dual citizenshi­p crisis kicked off in July when the minor Greens party’s co-deputy leader Scott Ludlam resigned after revealing he had dual Australian-New Zealand citizenshi­p.

The crisis soon claimed other victims, including Canadian-born Greens senator Larissa Waters and resources minister Matt Canavan, who left cabinet after finding his mother signed him up to Italian citizenshi­p in his 20s.

Joyce said yesterday he had been contacted by the New Zealand High Commission last week to advise him that he “could be a citizen of New Zealand by descent”.

While Joyce – the leader of the Nationals party – was born in Australia, he told parliament his father was born in New Zealand and moved to Australia in 1947.

A spokesman for New Zealand internal affairs minister Peter Dunne said there was no doubt about Joyce’s status, saying “as far as New Zealand law goes, he is a New Zealand citizen under the Citizenshi­p Act”.

“Mr Joyce was born to a New Zealand citizen father and even though (the father) migrated to Australia in the 1940s that citizenshi­p remained and he passed on the right of citizenshi­p ... to his children.”

He said citizenshi­p was automatica­lly granted and did not need an applicatio­n. – AFP

 ?? AFPPIX ?? This photo taken on Sunday shows Eiji Ohmatsudan­i leading the Sasa-ren dancers on a street during the Awa Odori festival in the Japanese city of Tokushima. The four-day dance festival attracts more than 1.2 million people annually.
AFPPIX This photo taken on Sunday shows Eiji Ohmatsudan­i leading the Sasa-ren dancers on a street during the Awa Odori festival in the Japanese city of Tokushima. The four-day dance festival attracts more than 1.2 million people annually.
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