Peter Dutton appears to respond to wrong petition in another blow for families separated by travel ban

More than 11,000 people signed the petition for parents to be considered the immediate family of Australian citizens or permanent residents, so they can enter the country under COVID-19 travel exemptions.

Peter Dutton appeared to respond to the wrong petition in a new blow for families separated by the travel ban.

Peter Dutton appeared to respond to the wrong petition in a new blow for families separated by the travel ban. Source: AAP

Australians campaigning to change a travel rule impacting separated families have been dealt another blow, after receiving Home Affairs Minister Peter Dutton's formal response to their parliamentary petition. 
 
More than 11,000 people signed the petition seeking to allow overseas parents to be considered the "immediate family" of Australian citizens or permanent residents, so they can enter the country under COVID-19 travel rules.
 
The response from Mr Dutton that was uploaded to the Parliament House website on Monday came more than three months after the closing date for signatures, but appeared to address a different petition.
While the Department of Home Affairs , signee Valeria Greenfield said it was still upsetting and disappointing to open the minister's letter on Monday.
 
"He's talking about something totally different," Ms Greenfield, , told SBS News.
 
"So not respect at all, after almost 12,000 people have been waiting for this response over three months."
 
Mr Dutton's response appeared to reference petition EN 1870 regarding border exemptions for New Zealanders in relationships with Australians, rather than EN 1860, which relates to the parent rule.
Mr Dutton's respond appeared to reference a different petition.
Mr Dutton's respond appeared to reference a different petition. Source: APH website

'How long do we need to wait?'

Ms Greenfield has been separated from her parents, who are yet to meet their first granddaughter as they have been prevented from travelling to Australia from Peru.
 
She is now planning to apply for an exemption to travel to Peru, but says she fears it will pose a health risk to her family. "How long more do we need to wait for something? We have nothing ... we have uncertainty, that's all we have," she said.
 
"You can see how desperate we are. Who wants to travel right now? Just desperate people."
Valeria hoped her parents in Peru could come and help her raise her daughter.
Valeria hoped her parents in Peru could come and help her raise her daughter. Source: Catalina Florez/SBS News

Ms Greenfield said affected families had been very upset and frustrated for many months, and when they opened Mr Dutton's letter on Monday, they wondered if it was a joke.

While advocates already know the government won't be changing the rule, Ms Greenfield said they wanted the formal response to support further advocacy.
 
"There is no respect at all to the migrant families. Minister Peter Dutton can't even take the time to answer to that petition properly, and makes these mistakes," she said.
Labor MP Julian Hill said it was "beyond ridiculous" that the minister "can't even answer the right petition".
 
"it's basic courtesy and human decency to give people an honest, and hopefully thoughtful, response," he told SBS News.
 
Mr Dutton's office has been contacted for comment.
You may have noticed SBS News is 

Here's where else you can find our content and follow us:
SBS News website: Save our website  as a favourite. 

SBS News app: Download our app from  or  and subscribe to the alerts.

SBS News newsletters: Get the latest delivered to your email inbox by 

Apple News: Follow the SBS News channel .

Twitter: Follow us at 

Instagram: Follow us at 

YouTube: Subscribe at 

TikTok: Follow us at 

Reddit: Join us at 

SBS also publishes news in 68 languages online and on radio. Find your language at  and specific health information about COVID-19 at 

You can also still find stories from  and  on their websites and various social media platforms. 





Share
4 min read
Published 22 February 2021 9:02pm
By SBS News
Source: SBS



Share this with family and friends