Visitor visa disappoints

Sunbury family Sukhdeep Kaur, Ravneet Kaur and Jaswinder Singh. (Damjan Janevski). 340494_01

Sunbury mother Sukhdeep Kaur has decided to surrender her recently granted visitor visa and go into immigration detention, placing her fate in the hands of the federal government.

As previously reported by Star Weekly, Sunbury parents Sukhdeep Kaur and Jaswinder Singh and their two children arrived in Australia in 2015.

Both parents applied for ministerial intervention in June 2023 seeking permanent Australian residency after Mrs Kaur’s employer failed to lodge a permanent residency application on her behalf.

Since that time they have received multiple visa extensions but their long-term fate remained uncertain.

Mr Singh is currently in India and is reluctant to return to Sunbury with the visa situation so uncertain.

He left Melbourne in early October to see a severley ill family member, despite an exemption to travel claim not being processed at the time of his departure and risking a three year ban on returning to Australia.

The family member died during Mr Singh’s visit.

Mrs Kaur said that on October 10, she and her husband were granted visitor visas allowing them to stay in Australia until April 10 2025. They were also given the option of applying for a parent visa.

Mrs Kaur said that applying for a parent visa would be costly, would require dependence on their daughter, and could involve a wait time of 10–15 years to process, requiring both parents to return to India.

“Why do we deserve to pay the government? We worked hard, we came here legally, we gave 10 years of life to this country. Why have they ignored our hard work and ten years of our life?” Ms Kaur said.

“We are hard workers. We are good people. We love to live here.“

While the recently granted visitor visa would allow Mrs Kaur to return to India and visit her mother, who has breast cancer, she decided that it would be too difficult under the circumstances.

“It’s better I go to the detention centre and follow their decision if they give me justice or not … then I will decide,” she said.

“The government has sent me again in limbo … it’s really really stressful, I can’t explain in words … What is the reason? Where is our fault?”

She said that she has packed up most of her belongings, is investigating how to rehome her dog, and is mentally preparing to go to a detention centre in the next few weeks.

Ravneet said that politicians including Hawke MP Sam Rae, a Greens Party senator, and a Liberal Party legislative council member wrote letters of support for the family.

A spokesperson for Home Affairs said the department cannot comment on individual cases for privacy reasons, and that powers allow the Minister to intervene in individual cases if they think it is in the public interest.

Hawke MP Sam Rae was contacted for comment.