You are here:
AustLII >>
Databases >>
Administrative Appeals Tribunal of Australia >>
2024 >>
[2024] AATA 1738
Database Search
| Name Search
| Recent Decisions
| Noteup
| LawCite
| Download
| Context | No Context | Help
2205961 (Refugee) [2024] AATA 1738 (29 May 2024)
Last Updated: 18 June 2024
2205961 (Refugee) [2024] AATA 1738 (29 May 2024)
DECISION RECORD
DIVISION: Migration & Refugee Division
CASE NUMBER: 2205961
COUNTRY OF REFERENCE: Taiwan
MEMBER: Mara Moustafine
DATE: 29 May 2024
PLACE OF DECISION: Sydney
DECISION: The Tribunal affirms the decision not to grant the applicant
a protection visa.
Statement made on 29 May 2024 at 1:47pm
CATCHWORDS
REFUGEE – protection visa – Taiwan
– applicant left Australia – decision under review
affirmed
LEGISLATION
Migration Act 1958 (Cth), ss 36,
65
Any references appearing in square brackets indicate that
information has been omitted from this decision pursuant to section 431 of the
Migration Act 1958 and replaced with generic information which does not allow
the identification of an applicant, or their relative or other dependant.
STATEMENT OF DECISION AND REASONS
APPLICATION FOR
REVIEW
-
This is an application for review of a decision made by a delegate of the
Minister for Home Affairs on 19 April 2022 to refuse to
grant the applicant a
protection visa under s 65 of the Migration Act 1958 (Cth) (the
Act). The applicant, who claims to be a citizen of Taiwan, applied for the visa
on 3 October 2021.
-
For the following reasons, the Tribunal has decided to affirm the decision
under review.
CONSIDERATION OF CLAIMS AND EVIDENCE
-
Under s 65(1) a visa may be granted only if the decision maker is
satisfied that the prescribed criteria for the visa have been satisfied.
-
So far as is relevant to this matter, s 36(2) of the Act provides that a
criterion for a protection visa is that the applicant for the visa is a
non-citizen in Australia. This means that a protection visa may only be
granted if the applicant is in Australia.
-
Movement records indicate that the applicant is not in Australia. It appears
that she left Australia [in] October 2023. The Tribunal
wrote to the applicant
advising that its records showed that she is not in Australia and therefore
could not be granted a protection
visa and inviting the applicant to comment on
the information.
-
No response was received from the applicant.
-
The Tribunal is satisfied from the circumstances set out above that the
applicant is not in Australia. Therefore, the applicant
does not satisfy the
requirements of s 36(2) and cannot be granted a protection visa.
-
Having reached this conclusion, it is not necessary to consider the applicant's
substantive case for the grant of the visa.
DECISION
-
The Tribunal affirms the decision not to grant the applicant a protection
visa.
Mara Moustafine
Member
AustLII:
Copyright Policy
|
Disclaimers
|
Privacy Policy
|
Feedback
URL: http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/cases/cth/AATA/2024/1738.html