Australia rejects visa pleas from its former Kabul embassy guards
The federal government has told more than 100 former security guards who worked at the Australian embassy in Kabul that they will not be allowed to apply for special refugee visas reserved for former staff.
The Department of Foreign Affairs issued some of the rejection letters to the group on Saturday, telling them they were ineligible to apply for the special visas reserved for Afghans who worked alongside Australian agencies, called the locally engaged employee visa.
Under the program, former staff must obtain certification, or proof of their employment, from the Department in order to proceed to the next step to apply for the visas.
âThank you for your application for certification under the Australian Governmentâs visa policy for at-risk employees,â the letter reads.
âUnfortunately you are not eligible for certification under this visa policy.â
Employees of Australiaâs embassy were told in the days after its closure in late May they would be eligible to apply for the visas.
The letter sent by DFAT to Afghans who worked as guards at the Australian embassy in Kabul.
Supplied
In the letter, no reason is given for the certification rejection, but it encourages the applicant to consider the main humanitarian visa stream, of which Australia is offering 3000 places.
SBS News has contacted the Department of Home Affairs and Foreign Affairs for comment but has yet to receive a response.
An embassy guard who says he worked at the embassy right up until its closure said heâs in hiding and fears for his life, following the country's takeover by the Taliban.
âI already feel disappointed because I am like a prisoner at home - I canât get out,â he told SBS News.
âEveryday there is news that the Taliban will begin searching house by house ... for those who served with the military and those who worked with foreign forces.â
The guard said he hoped the decision would be overturned.
âWe hope this (sic) not happen to us,â he said.
âWe serve with loyalty and honesty at the embassy and we do not deserve the Australian government to turn their backs on us.
âWe served them, we protected them and put our lives in danger.â
Military lawyer Glenn Kolomeitz, who has been working to secure visas for many locally engaged employees, said the letters were an impediment to help at-risk former staff.
âWe are trying to save lives whilst being actively obstructed by bureaucrats in Canberra,â he told SBS News.
âThis entire shameful episode will be subject to judicial scrutiny in coming months and, hopefully, parliamentary scrutiny in coming years."
He said it was unclear why some had been rejected while others were cleared to apply for the visas.
âHaving read the acceptance and rejection letters there is no rhyme nor reason why some have been accepted but most have been rejected.
"Same job, same embassy, same risk to life - with somebody in Canberra now deciding who to throw to the wolves on an apparent whim."
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