Australian Defence Force preventing New Zealanders from serving

Listen to this article:

Members of the Australian Army march to celebrate Anzac Day. Picture: AP

WELLINGTON/CANBERRA, 26 APRIL 2019 (NZ HERALD) – Expatriate Kiwis who want to serve in the Australian military are being rejected on the grounds that they could pose a security threat.

While it was already a difficult process for New Zealanders to sign up to the Australian Defence Force (ADF), the country has now made it near-impossible by withdrawing all applications, the ABC reported.

More than 300,000 New Zealanders call Australia home but a 2001 law change removed access to permanent residency – the minimum requirement for joining the military – as well as welfare, higher education and other entitlements.

Documents obtained by the ABC highlighted concerns by the Australian Government of an “insider threat” in allowing non-citizens to join the ADF.

Until recently, non-citizens had a slim opportunity to join the ADF but their applications were forced to the bottom of the pile.

In an email sent last year, the head of Australian Defence Force recruiting said citizenship was a key criterion to enter the ADF.

“Permanent residents will only ever be forwarded to the services for a waiver decision when there are no other candidates with Australian citizenships,” the email said.

In response, the Government’s security vetting agency said: “Given the wider Government focus on mitigating the insider threat, all existing applications from non-Australian citizens have been withdrawn.”

That meant all New Zealanders who arrived post-2001 would not be accepted into the ADF, regardless of the circumstances.

Expat New Zealanders have been campaigning for the right to enlist in Australia for years and have been lobbying politicians across the ditch.

The Returned Services Association has backed their campaign, saying the Australian policy went against the history of co-operation between New Zealand and Australian soldiers.

The decision to withdraw non-citizens’ applications for the ADF is the latest chapter in a long-running battle over expat New Zealanders’ entitlements in Australia.

The changes in 2001 withdrew several types of benefit (unemployment, youth and sickness) for New Zealanders – who enter Australia on a Special Category Visa.

But the most significant change was to make it much harder to get citizenship.

It required Kiwis to compete with other immigrants for permanent residence – which is capped – instead of being able to skip that and apply directly for citizenship.

In 2016, Australia loosened the rules to create an easier path to citizenship under certain conditions, including a requirement that they had earned AUD$53,000 (US$37,000) for five consecutive years.

The Australian law change in 2001 was designed to stop “backdoor” migration from the Pacific Islands and Hong Kong Chinese, who gained New Zealand residency to settle in Australia.

Array
(
    [post_type] => post
    [post_status] => publish
    [orderby] => date
    [order] => DESC
    [update_post_term_cache] => 
    [update_post_meta_cache] => 
    [cache_results] => 
    [category__in] => 1
    [posts_per_page] => 4
    [offset] => 0
    [no_found_rows] => 1
    [date_query] => Array
        (
            [0] => Array
                (
                    [after] => Array
                        (
                            [year] => 2024
                            [month] => 01
                            [day] => 26
                        )

                    [inclusive] => 1
                )

        )

)