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Parliamentary inquiry needed for migrant issues

PRESS RELEASE | Erica Stanford | 6 April 2021 -



A parliamentary inquiry would finally give a voice to the desperate migrants who feel unheard and ignored by Jacinda Ardern and her Government, National’s Immigration spokesperson Erica Stanford says.

National is calling for Parliament’s Education and Workforce Select Committee to open an inquiry into the migrant issues created by Covid-19 and New Zealand’s closed border, as well as Immigration New Zealand’s policy settings and rules. “Since our border closed a year ago, many of our temporary visa holders have had their lives thrown into turmoil,” Ms Stanford says. “Critical workers – people we invited here to nurse our elderly and teach in our children’s classrooms – are being kept apart from their babies and young children. “Kiwi businesses already hurt by Covid-19 have lost vital, highly-specialised workers who had no option but to return to their families because their partners and children couldn’t join them. “These migrants have had no platform to share their stories or call for change. Their letters and emails have gone largely unanswered. The so-called ‘kind’ Government and its silent Immigration Minister Kris Faafoi have refused to give them any kind of hope or assurance. “A select committee inquiry would allow MPs to learn how Covid-19 has upended these migrants’ lives. It would enable us to put questions to the Minister and authorities across a wide range of issues, and allow all workable solutions to be explored, including the implementation of trans-Tasman and Pacific travel bubbles. “With every passing day of inaction, Jacinda Ardern and Kris Faafoi risk losing more of our critical migrant workforce and eroding more of New Zealand’s reputation as a welcoming destination for migrants. “I have written to my Labour, Green and ACT colleagues on the committee seeking their support for an inquiry. I hope they will agree that our migrants need a platform for their voices to be heard and for solutions to be found.”

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