New Zealand to tighten immigration rules amid crime concerns

New Zealand to tighten immigration rules amid crime concerns

WELLINGTON, March 18 (Reuters) - New Zealand's government will introduce legislation on Wednesday to tighten deportation, asylum and immigration enforcement rules, ‌saying the changes are needed to tackle serious offending, ‌migrant exploitation and bad-faith claims.

Reuters

Immigration Minister Erica Stanford said the changes would give authorities "proportionate ​tools" to manage immigration risks while ensuring the system is fair, functional and effective.

The bill would extend from 10 to 20 years the period during which a resident can become liable for deportation for serious ‌criminal offending, raise the ⁠maximum sentence for migrant exploitation to 10 years from seven, and widen powers to act on false or ⁠misleading information supplied during the immigration process.

The bill will have to pass three readings in parliament, but as the government has a majority it ​will likely ​pass.

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The move reflects a broader ​push by governments globally to ‌strengthen immigration and asylum systems as they face political pressure to deter abuse, deport non-citizens convicted of serious crimes and preserve public support for refugee protections.

Alongside the bill, the government will table a parliamentary paper proposing further asylum changes, including allowing officials to consider serious ‌crimes committed in New Zealand before refugee ​status is decided, according to the statement.

Stanford ​said 14 known refugee ​claimants had been convicted of serious offences in New ‌Zealand, including murder, serious sexual ​and drug crimes, and ​arson.

Other proposals would let authorities move more quickly against claimants deemed to be acting in bad faith, including those who ​deliberately seek publicity to ‌bolster asylum claims, and against those who fail to attend ​biometric appointments without good reason, the statement said.

(Reporting by ​Lucy Craymer; Editing by Lincoln Feast.)

 

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