The New Zealand Herald

Push for tighter citizenshi­p rules

Turnbull says focus of new process will be on Australian values

- Rod McGuirk

Ain Canberra ustralia plans to tighten its citizenshi­p rules to require higher English language skills, longer residency and evidence of integratio­n such as a job, officials yesterday.

Prime 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 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 organisati­ons and school enrolment 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 centre-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 one in four Australian­s either born overseas or with at least one parent born in another country.

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