| Labor for Refugees Qld Newsletter – June 2026 This coming week is Refugee Week, starting this weekend, and running through until next Saturday. We have included some links to events happening around Queensland and hope you will be able to attend some of them.Many of you will be attending local policy conferences in the lead-up to the ALP National Conference being held 23-25th July, in Tarntanya /Adelaide and ahead of State Conference at the end of August. We have some motions that you may wish to consider proposing at your branch and local policy conferences:Motion Multiculturalism Anti-Racism FrameworkMulticultural Labor Campaign – Support Multiculturalism and Anti-Racism. We encourage you to put these motions forward. Also, for reference, here is a copy of the National Labor for Refugees submission to the ALP National Conference. Meeting Notice – 2026 Annual General Meeting: Please note that the Labor for Refugees 2026 AGM will be held online on Wednesday 12th August 2026 at 6:30 pm.Meeting link and agenda will be circulated closer to the time. Continuing Campaigns: Ongoing letter writing on Offshore arrangements. Information and letter template can be found here. For information to support refugees trapped in Indonesia, join the Circle of Friends group here. Other ways to get involved in campaigning for refugee rights: Amnesty International has a National Amnesty Refugee Network, which, among other issues, is focused on supporting the men left in PNG after the Manus detention centre closed. You can read more here. Join Amnesty International Australia here. The Australian Refugee Action Network (ARAN) is a national coalition of groups lobbying for refugee rights. Read about their ongoing campaigns here. Refugee Action Collective meets regularly in Brisbane. More information here. Upcoming Events Sun 14th June – Sat 20th June Refugee Week- Celebrates a Million Stories Find your local refugee week activity here. Friday, 12th June Screening of We Are Not Powerless, by Jolyon Hall and Muzafar AliCost: $20, includes talk by Muzafar Ali about his work with refugee schools in Indonesia, Afghanistan girls’ schools, and elsewhere. (There are also screenings in Machan’s Beach (Cairns), Warwick, Maleny, and Murwillumbah, in northern NSW.)Tickets here. More screening information and tickets here. BrisbaneSunday 14th June Welcome Walk, 1 pm, Orleigh Park, West End, Brisbane. Walk by donation. More information here. Wednesday 17th June World Refugee Day Celebration, 7.30 – 9.10 pm, Queensland Multicultural Centre, Kangaroo Point. Free screening of Rosemary’s Way.This move celebrates Rosemary Kariuki and a group of migrant women of suburban Sydney, whose lives Rosemary helps transform, as they find their voices and confidence in Australia, their new home.Register for your free ticket here Townsville: Celebrating Multicultural Food in Unity. From 4 – 8 pm, Sunday 14th June, Aitkenvale State School. Register here to attend.QLD Labor State Conference 2026. The Queensland State Conference will take place once again in Brisbane on 29-30 August, a month after the ALP National Conference. We hope to have a stall and raffle. More details will be provided soon! Want to read more refugee news? Here are some suggestions for further reading. Amnesty International’s 2025/26 Report on global rights For the Australian chapter, including the state of refugee and migrant rights. Temporary Visa bans, Phillips,Michelle (2026) “Help for Athletes, bans for others: unpacking Australia’s complex, chaotic migration developments”, The Conversation, March 11, 2026.Analysis of Australia’s temporary visa ban and the recent granting of visas to Iranian soccer players seeking asylum from Iran.Offshore arrangements Haydar, Nour (2026) “Sara Fears her father will be deported from Australia to Nauru – a place of ‘final and lifelong punishment” The Guardian Australia, June 4, 2026. Submissions to the Senate inquiry into offshore arrangements, held 5th May, 2026. Labor for Refugees National Coordinating Committee & Hanne Worsoe, Convenor of L4R Qld, made 2 of the 126 submissions. Hansard transcript of public hearing, 5th May 2026Report due 17th June, 2026, next week. Refugees in Indonesia: Brown, Tom and Missbach, Antje (2016), “The boats may have ‘stopped’, but more refugees are stuck in limbo in Indonesia”, The Conversation, March 22nd, 2016.Written in 2016, but still relevant. Analysis of refugees left trapped in Indonesia since 2014, when the Minister for Immigration and Border Protection, Scott Morrison, banned their resettlement in Australia. We hope to see many of you at our AGM in August. We look forward to seeing some of you at the ALP National Conference in Tarntanya/Adelaide!Warm regards,The Executive of Labor for Refugees Queensland About Labor for Refugees QueenslandLabor for Refugees Queensland is a registered association with the Australian Labor Party, Queensland. Our aims and objectives are as follows:To advocate for policy for refugees and those seeking to engage Australia’s international obligations to provide protection, that is compliant with international law, respectful of Human Rights, equitable, socially just and in keeping with stated Labor values. To disseminate factual and comprehensive information to ensure policy discussion, development and implementation is based on fact, and reflective of Labor values. To advocate for progressive reform and appropriate differentiation of legislation, regulation, policy and practice concerning refugees, those seeking protection, those who are forced to migrate due to natural disasters and unlivable homelands, and migrants who freely choose to come to Australia. The views expressed in this newsletter are not necessarily those of the Australian Labor Party. Want to change how you receive these emails? You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list. |
Author: Jenny Haines
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L4R QUEENSLAND NEWSLETTER JUNE 2026
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L4R NEWSLETTER MARCH 2026 Labor for Refugees NSW and ACT
Our next meeting will be held on Wednesday 25 March at 6.30pm
Anyone who supports our goals is welcome to attend.
Minutes of our last meeting on the 25 February 2026 follow L4RNSW-ACTMinMtg25Feb25
The next four months is crucial
We have both a National and State ALP Conference coming up in July this year.
These conferences will dictate the future of government policy for refugees and people seeking asylum
L4R has to ensure that refugees/people seeking asylum, are not ignored at these forums. We are concerned that the obsession by Labor to try and avoid debate on refugees because of the fear of being wedged by the Coalition and One Nation, will mean that the most vulnerable people on this planet, will be ignored.
L4R Submission to the ALP National Policy Forum
Our L4R National Co-ordinating Committee (NCC) was made aware last week, that if we wished to amend, delete or add anything to the 2023 ALP National Platform, for consideration for the draft 2026 Platform, we had to get these proposals to supportive National Policy Forum (NPF) members by the deadline of 8pm on Monday 16 March. Our role as advocates for refugees and people seeking asylum, is to lobby hard to ensure that hard won policies negotiated at the last 2023 National Conference, remain in the 2026 Platform. In addition, L4R wishes to see improvements made to existing policies.We worked right up to the end of last weekend and managed to complete our submission (plus talking points). On Sunday night, we sent our documents to supportive NPF delegates, one each from Victoria, NSW and the ACT. We were asked to narrow down our submission to a few priorities that were value-based, short and without money values attached.
The NPF next met with Ministers in Melbourne yesterday, to debate these proposed edits to the Platform. Two delegates lodged our L4R amendments and the mover spoke in support of them.
We were informed that Richard Marles, Penny Wong and Tony Burke attended the session on Chapter 7 “Australia’s Place in a Changing World” . Chapter 7 deals with the issues of migration, Australia’s humanitarian intake, settlement services and refugee assessment, Australia’s border and immigration detention.
We expect and hope that after this meeting, a revised draft Platform will be released at some point prior to the July ALP National Conference, with enough time to provide an opportunity for members to comment. The draft will then be debated at National Conference allowing Delegates to vote on the contents to create a 2026 National Platform. The submission we made to the NPF can be read at L4RNPFSbmtoPlatformReview15-3-26 National Conference Delegate – elections A number of ALP FECs are currently in the process of electing their Delegate for the National ALP Conference. Each FEC is entitled to send one Delegate. The ballot opened on the 9 March and closes at 5pm on the 30 March.
A number of candidates care deeply about the plight of refugees and people seeking asylum. Nizza Siano is the National and NSW/ACT Secretary of Labor for Refugees and nominated for Conference Delegate from Wentworth FEC. Nizza has made refugees/people seeking asylum, a priority. If she is elected, Nizza will make sure that she advocates/votes for policy reform on behalf of refugees.
Meeting with NSW Minister Rose JacksonL4R NSW/ACT has secured a meeting with Rose Jackson, the NSW Minister for Water, Housing, Homelessness, Mental Health and Youth. Our meeting will take place on Tuesday 31 March. The purpose of our meeting is to advocate for our campaign on homelessness on behalf of asylum seekers and non-residents. The name of our campaign is HOMELESSNESS SUPPORT SHOULD BE BASED ON NEED AND NOT VISA STATUS.Since early this year, we have asked branches to support our campaign by moving our motion and ensuring it’s submitted to the NSW Labor Conference. The NSW ALP Conference takes place on the 4/5 July 2026. The deadline to submit motions is the 3 April so if your branch has not yet held its meeting, you can still support it. The Secretary of your Branch/SEC should ensure that if the motion is carried, it’s submitted, using the Online Policy Motions Portal as well as sending a copy of the motion to Rose Jackson.Labor for Refugees supports the assertion in the NSW Labor Government Homelessness Strategy 2025-2035, which acknowledges that the right to housing is a basic human right. The Strategy estimates that more than 35,000 people are experiencing homelessness in NSW. There is an increase of 27% between the censuses carried out in 2011 and 2021.
The Refugee Council of Australia reported in 2025 that in the City of Sydney alone, nearly 20% of people sleeping rough are non-residents on uncertain visas, including asylum seekers. This motion is about giving all non-residents and asylum seekers access to homelessness support.
We say that no one should be excluded based on their visa status!You can access a PDF copy of the motion at L4RNSWStateConferenceMotion2026 Hope to see you online at our 25 March meeting. Regards
Nizza Siano
Secretary L4R NSW
email: contact@labor4refugees.com -
L4R NEWSLETTER MAY 2026 Labor for Refugees NSW and ACT
Our next L4R meeting will be held on Wednesday 27 May at 6.30pm
Anyone who supports our L4R goals is welcome to attend.
Minutes of our last meeting on the 22 April 2026 follow L4RNSW-ACTMinMtg22Apr26
L4R submission to NPF on current Draft 2026 ALP National Platform
In preparation for the National ALP Conference which takes place on 23-25 July 2026, our L4R National Co-ordinating Committee (NCC) submitted our Platform amendments, to be considered for the draft 2026 ALP National Platform. Our document was sent to the National Policy Forum (NPF), which first met in March this year. NPF members who supported L4R, advocated at that meeting, for our recommendations.Our first L4R submission can be read at L4RNPFSbmtoPlatformReview15-3-26 We received feedback after the meeting which we subsequently reported to members at our April meeting (see above link to the 22/4/26 minutes of our meeting). To summarise:They got rid of unnecessary verbiage as well as the out of date material – including the Defence and Foreign Policy bits.
The good news is that they removed the clause in favour of using hotels as APODs and removed clause 10 on Mandatory Detention (both L4R recommendations).
They kept the commitment to legislating the 90-day rule (although this had not yet been implemented).
As expected from what was reported to us, the Special Envoy and a Parliamentary Inquiry into Detention have gone (two issues that L4R won at the 2023 National Conference).
Aspiration for Humanitarian Intake of 27,000 and 10,000 Complementary, remains.
Relevant clauses for offshore processing (“Excision…etc.”) remain.
Seeing that our recommendations were already considered by the NPF, we could not see much point in putting up the same things again to the NPF when they meet again for the final time on 11 June, as they would clearly not be adopted.
Which is why when the L4R NCC met again on 12 May, we focused on our response to the current Consultation Draft 2026 ALP National Platform. Our recommendations were sent to the NPF last weekend. Our 2nd and final L4R submission with our amendments to the Draft Platform can be viewed at L4RNPFSbmtoDft2026Platform17-5-26We are hopeful that the NPF will accept our recommendations at its June meeting. L4R campaign on homelessness Since meeting with the NSW Minister for Water, Housing, Homelessness, Mental Health and Youth Rose Jackson on 31 March last, L4R has been negotiating on the wording of our motion for the 4/5 July NSW ALP Conference. We have been advocating on the issue of homelessness on behalf of asylum seekers and non-residents. The name of our campaign is “HOMELESSNESS SUPPORT SHOULD BE BASED ON NEED AND NOT VISA STATUS” and it has been supported by the Refugee Council of Australia and Asylum Seekers Centre. The motion has been endorsed by a number of ALP branches. We have now come up with an acceptable form of wording for the motion for which we will be seeking endorsement at next week’s L4R meeting before taking it to the NSW ALP Conference. We plan to promote this motion, together with the Background, to Conference Delegates, which will provide them with the facts before they vote on it.
The motion follows:That this NSW Labor Conference recognises the right to housing is a human right. Humans include people in our community without visas and we recognise that the Commonwealth controls who gets visas and when, as well as the conditions on those visas, including withholding the right to work. In these circumstances, to ensure homelessness is rare, brief and non-recurring in NSW, we call on the NSW Labor Government to include accessible, safe, affordable shelter for non-residents and asylum seekers in the NSW Homelessness Strategy 2025-2035. We believe that this is an improvement on the original wording of our motion and are pleased with the outcome. We thank Minister Rose Jackson for her support.
Work Rights L4R has been sending letters to the government since June last year expressing deep concern about the Department of Home Affairs removing the right to work from non-citizens who -seek Ministerial Intervention (MI) under section 48B or section 351 of the Migration Act 1958 (MA), andhave had even a day of being ‘unlawful’ (i.e., being without a valid visa, for any reason, including reasons beyond their control such as the Department not issuing a visa requested before expiry of the visa which existed at the time of the applicant’s request).Our first letter sent to the Assistant Minister for Immigration, Matt Thistlethwaite in June 2025 (copied to a number of other Ministers and Assistant Ministers), remained unanswered. We wrote to him again on the 1 September 2025 and pointed out that since first writing to him, we had sighted a letter which made clear that there is discretion available to Home Affairs in at least some Ministerial Intervention matters and that the department has been inflexible. We stated that the removal of a person’s work rights is clearly a very serious step for any government to take, but especially this Labor Government.
On the 16 January 2026, we received a response from a Director in the Department of Home Affairs who referred to the Migration Regulations 1994, policy guidelines and individuals’ circumstances. Our reading of the response is that Departmental delegates, do not have discretion to grant work rights to people on bridging visas, which are intended to be very short term. This Director also stated that the Department provided needs-based support to eligible non-citizens, who cannot support themselves and can demonstrate hardship. You can read the letter here L4RWorkRightsDHAletter15Jan26 Not happy with this response, we sent another letter to Matt Thistlethwaite on the 15 April last. We stated that under the UN’s Universal Declaration of Human Rights – everyone has the right to work.Our solution to this chronic problem, was to propose simple legislative changes. JUST AMEND THE LAW.
Read our latest letter at L4RWorkRightsletter15Apr26
AUSTRALIAN FAMILIES STUCK IN SYRIA L4R wrote to the Minister for Home Affairs, Immigration and Citizenship Tony Burke and Assistant Minister for Citizenship, Customs and Multicultural Affairs on the 1 May last, expressing dismay at the way the Government has treated the Australian families trapped in Syrian camps. We pointed out that behaving recklessly or even dangerously does not mean that their rights as Australian citizens should or can lawfully be denied. Citizenship confers obligations on countries in relation to their citizens. Every time you deport a non-citizen to the country of their citizenship because they fail the Australian ‘character test’, you are in effect saying to the country of citizenship: this person is your problem, not ours. Why do we not apply the same principle to our citizens which another country seeks to deport? To abandon our citizens is to make them, in substance, stateless. This is likely an unlawful punishment outside the power of the Executive.
We ended our letter saying that it was important to differentiate ourselves from the Opposition and One Nation and not allow the fear of their reprisals, influence the way we deal with these desperate Australians.
Our letter follows L4RletterIsisfamiliesinSyria1May26 2026-7 Federal Budget’s impact on refugees and people seeking humanitarian protectionTo read a good analysis of the recent Budget, we recommend the Refugee Council of Australia as a source. The link is RCOA2026-7BudgetReportRefugees12May26There is some good news but not much. To summarise – The federal budget delivered last week kept the humanitarian intake at 20,000 places for 2026-2027. The budget allocated $910.9 million to refugee, humanitarian and migrant services, with $1.256 billion to fund onshore detention and compliance for 2026-2027.The government plans to improve skills recognition for the permanent migration program and to support employment for refugees across 20 regional locations. The budget also allocated $10.8 million from 2026 to 2028 for community-led health initiatives for refugee and migrant women.
Opposition Leader Angus Taylor’s budget reply speech proposed limiting Australia’s migration intake and restricting a range of social services to Australian citizens only. Taylor linked migration to policies on housing, social services and cost of living. The Prime Minister accused Angus Taylor of ‘dog-whistling’ to marginalise immigrants. An anonymous Liberal MP described the party as being ‘corroded by hate’. Multicultural leaders have also criticised the Coalition, saying that it ‘makes immigrants feel less safe and damages social cohesion’.
We agree that the Coalition’s jingoism is damaging and unacceptable to our society.
Cisuara Learning Centre20 screenings booked across Australia!
“We Are Not Powerless” is coming to a cinema near you.
These screenings are going to be full of big-hearted positivity and inspiration. Don’t miss it. Get your tickets early and share the screenings with your friends.
WE ARE NOT POWERLESSRunning time: 95 minsTen years ago Muzafar Ali and his wife Nagina escaped the Taliban in Afghanistan. They found themselves living in Indonesia as refugees when Australia ‘stopped the boats’. Determined to do something, they started a small two room school, which soon became the hub of a community and the most successful refugee-led initiative in the world.
We Are Not Powerless tells the story of what can happen when a community refuses to give in and work together for hope, love, and education To see the trailer and purchase tickets, go to wearenotpowerless.com.au RegardsNizza Siano
Secretary L4R NSW
email: contact@labor4refugees.com -
L4R NEWSLETTER APRIL 2026 Labor for Refugees , NSW and ACT
Our next meeting will be held this Wednesday 22 April at 6.30pm
Anyone who supports our L4R goals is welcome to attend.
Minutes of our last meeting on the 25 March 2026 follow L4RNSW-ACTMinMtg25Mar26
Submission to the ALP National Policy Forum
In preparation for the National ALP Conference in July 2026, last month, our L4R National Co-ordinating Committee (NCC) drafted and sent a submission with our amendments for the 2023 ALP National Platform, to the National Policy Forum (NPF), to be considered for the draft 2026 Platform. We wanted to ensure that what we won at the last 2023 National Conference, would remain in the 2026 Platform, in spite of the fact that some of these policies have not been implemented. We also wished to improve the government’s existing refugee policies.
When the NPF met with Ministers in Melbourne in March, to debate these proposed edits to the Platform, two of the delegates submitted our L4R amendments and spoke in support of them.
The next NPF meeting has been confirmed for 11th June with NPF members receiving the consultation draft platform. L4R is currently examining the revised draft platform and plans to make a further submission. You can view the Consultation Draft Platform here.If you would like to continue to help develop Labor’s National Platform you can make your submission here until May 25th.Submissions will be shared with the members of the NPF and will be part of shaping the final draft of the Platform which National Conference delegates will consider in July. Our first L4R submission can be read at L4RNPFSbmtoPlatformReview15-3-26We’ll reproduce our follow-up submission in our May newsletter.
National Conference Delegate – election outcomeThe ballot for the election of FEC Delegates for the National ALP Conference closed on the 30 March.
Nizza Siano, National and NSW/ACT Secretary of Labor for Refugees nominated for the position of Conference Delegate from Wentworth FEC making refugees and people seeking asylum her priority. Unfortunately, Nizza lost against another candidate. However, Nizza will be attending the National Conference in Adelaide as an Observer and plans to represent Labor for Refugees by staffing a L4R stall to promote what we do and recruit new members.
Meeting with NSW Minister Rose JacksonL4R NSW/ACT met with Rose Jackson, the NSW Minister for Water, Housing, Homelessness, Mental Health and Youth on Tuesday 31 March last. Our aim was to advocate for our campaign on homelessness on behalf of asylum seekers and non-residents for the NSW ALP Conference which takes place on the 4/5 July 2026. The name of our campaign is HOMELESSNESS SUPPORT SHOULD BE BASED ON NEED AND NOT VISA STATUS and our motion has been supported by a number of branches. Both the Asylum Seekers Centre and Refugee Council of Australia support our campaign and will be sending speakers to our NSW Labor Conference Fringe Event. The exact date and time of our event will be promoted, once NSW Labor informs us.You can access a PDF copy of the motion at L4RNSWStateConferenceMotion2026A summary of our meeting with Minister Jackson can be read at L4RmtgMinJacksonHomelessness31Mar26
Iranian Asylum SeekersThe impacts of the government’s ban on Iranian nationals travelling to Australia continues to be felt by the Iranian diaspora in Australia. The arrival control determination was put in place on 25 March and has affected approximately 7,000 Iranian visa holders. Critics have called attention to the differential treatment of Iranians in comparison to Ukrainian and Palestinian people who travelled to Australia on temporary visas and were subsequently granted humanitarian visas. The Iranian football team is another example of how differently one is treated by the government, when in the limelight.In response, some of our members have been prompted to carry a motion at their last branch meeting, supporting the Refugee Council of Australia’s criticism of the recently passed Migration Amendment (2026 Measures No. 1) Bill, giving the Minister for Home Affairs the power to prevent people already granted visas, from entering Australia if the conditions change in their country of origin.The branch requested that the Minister advise Border Force staff to implement this ban in line with humanitarian principles and give due consideration to the trauma which many visa holders may have suffered in the recent past.
Further, Branch members particularly asked the Minister for Home Affairs Tony Burke, to consider those Iranian citizens living in Australia on Bridging Visas especially those who are part of the “Legacy caseload” (2013), or those brought to Australia from off-shore processing centres for medical treatment. They should be entitled to a timely reassessment of their protection claims, addressing changes of circumstances in Iran. It was suggested that the government consider establishing a pathway to permanent residency for these Iranians.
Labor for Refugees is in the process of drafting a letter to Minister Burke, expressing our disappointment in this ban on Iranian citizens and asking that Iranians of all people, should be afforded our support.I hope to see you online this week at our 22 April meeting.Regards
Nizza Siano
Secretary L4R NSW
email: contact@labor4refugees.com -
L4R VICTORIA NEWSLETTER NOV 2025 – Labor for Refugees NSW/ACT
Dear Victorian Labor for Refugees Member,
I write to update you on developments regarding refugees and asylum seekers and activities of LFR in relation to National ALP forums .
Albanese Government Record on Refugees and Asylum Seekers
The attached document summarises key achievements and developments since the Albanese Government was elected in May 2022. There are some significant positives and achievements whilst some issues remain very much a “work in progress” . You will note the final positive item that it is expected that Australia will shortly take in its millionth refugee since WW11. However LFR remains opposed to the continuing use of Nauru for “offshore processing” and the new use of Nauru for prolonged detention of non-citizen members of the NZYQ cohort and potentially many others – see below.
The “Anti-Fairness” Act and the new contract to transfer non-citizens to Nauru
Like all Human Rights and Refugee advocate groups , LFR is concerned about the government’s continued use of Nauru for the small number of people who arrived by boat and the new contract with Nauru to send non-citizens there long term at great expense. The attached document has a draft motion, based on one developed by NSW/ACT LFR ,which as a LFR member I ask you to consider submitting to your Branch. It also includes some background information on the issues of the new contract and the new Act passed in September.
Meeting with Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke
The National Committee of LFR met with the Minister in his electorate office in Sydney on October 15. LFR priority issues of the legacy caseload, PNG and Nauru and components of the National ALP Platform not yet enacted were submitted to the Minister. We believe that a further meeting will take place in 2026.
National Policy Forum (NPF)
The NPF is responsible for producing the draft National Platform for the National Conference in July 2026. State Branches and Unions have elected members to the NPF which is having its first meeting on 13/11/25 . Two of the four elected Victorian members are LFR members.
LFR Review of Sections of the ALP Platform relevant to Asylum Seekers and Refugees
LFR Victorian Committee is meeting on 15/11/25 at 10.30 am at the Royal Standard Hotel (333 William Street, West Melbourne) to formulate recommendations for the 2026 ALP National Platform. Any members who wished to join us in this process would be welcome – notification of attendance for catering purposes would be appreciated. We will be inviting Victorian NPF elected members.
Elections for National Conference Delegates
Elections for Victorian delegates to National Conference will be held in the early months of 2026. At the 2023 LFR working with other delegates were successful achieving positive changes to the Platform. Support for any LFR members or supporters who are standing from Victorian LFR members would be most helpful.
LFR Members Forum 18th October 2025
An informative Forum was held at the Unitarian church featuring one refugee with lived experience of Nauru, one of the prolonged flawed fast track process and Jana Favero the head of systemic change at the Asylum Seekers Resource Centre. We were pleased to be joined by members of the Grandmothers for Refugees.
We look forward to your continuing support with our activities in 2026.
Peter Lynch
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L4R NEWSLETTER FEBRUARY 2026 – Labor for Refugees NSW/ACT
Jenny HainesFebruary 1, 2026Uncategorized
Activities since our last meetingSince November last year, L4R:provided our promotional material to ALP Balmain Branch to distribute at a street fair in Darling St Balmain, which took place on the 30/11/25met with Linda Scott on 4/11/25 who was elected onto the National Policy Forum, and discussed with her, the best way to advocate for refugees at the ALP National Conference on 23-25 July 2026sent a contingent of L4R members, to attend the 7/12/25 Tamil Human Rights Day event. Our NSW/ACT Co-Convenor Lauren Honcope, made a speech on L4R’s behalf. It’s worth reading. The link to her notes follows TamilRefugeeCnclHRevent7Dec25made a submission to the “Attorney-General’s Departmental Review of the Disability Discrimination Act 1992” (DDA) to seek removal of the exemption from the coverage of the DDA, for the Migration Act. Such an exemption does not exist in the Sex Discrimionation Act or the Racial Discrimination Act or the Australian Human Rights Commission Act. It does also exist in the Age Discrimination Act and needs to be removed from that legislation also.is putting the finishing touches on a submission to the Senate Inquiry into ‘Offshore processing and resettlement arrangements’. Submissions close on 13 Feb 2026. Copy of our submission will be made available in our next newsletter.met with representatives of the Asylum Seekers Centre to discuss our campaign and our L4R Fringe Event for the NSW Labor Conference on 4/5 July 2026 was invited by the Blue Mts Refugee Support Letter-Writing Group, to make a presentation about L4R and our campaigns. The presentation will take place on the 12 February 2026. NSW Labor Conference 4/5 July – L4R Fringe Event After meeting with representatives of the Asylum Seekers Centre (ASC) on two occasions, we invited their new CEO Elija Buol, to be the guest speaker at our Fringe Event at the NSW Labor Conference on the weekend of the 4/5 July 2026. We also invited another speaker from the Refugee Council of Australia (RCOA) and some refugees with lived experience of homelessness. The ASC has been running an advocacy campaign to “Fix the Safety Net” and has worked with the RCOA, with the aim of restoring funding to refugees/asylum seekers living in our community, dependent on charity for their survival.The ASC campaign, neatly links into our L4R campaign to have the Status Resolution Support Services (SRSS) payments restored for people seeking asylum, after the Coalition cut these welfare payments to a minimum in 2019. At the time, The Guardian reported that – “A Coalition government decision to slash income support for community-based asylum seekers has forced hundreds more to access emergency housing and food banks.”
The wait for a resolution to the status of some of these people seeking asylum, has led many of them to a life in limbo and uncertainty, created trauma and is compounded by the fact that many are denied access to Centrelink, fluctuating Medicare cover and diminishing work rights. This leaves people seeking asylum at risk of homelessness and destitution. It leads people to face impossible choices every day.We have lobbied the Federal Labor Government since 2019, to have these payments restored. Since then, there has been a surge in asylum seekers needing welfare assistanceWe also believe that our State Government is responsible for accommodation and emergency health care so we have drafted a motion for branch members to support and submit to the NSW Conference. The deadline for submitting motions to the relevant Policy Committee is Friday 3 April 2026. That leaves us only two full months of February and March, for branch meetings to be held before the deadline. We urge you to have this motion debated at your next branch meeting and if supported, to have your Branch Secretary forward it to the relevant bodies listed at the end of our motion. The motion follows.
HOMELESSNESS SUPPORT SHOULD BE BASED ON NEED AND NOT VISA STATUS
The NSW Labor Government Homelessness Strategy 2025-2035 acknowledges that the right to housing is a basic human right. The Strategy estimates that more than 35,000 people are experiencing homelessness in NSW. There is an increase of 27% between the censuses carried out in 2011 and 2021.The Refugee Council of Australia (RCOA) reported in 2025 that in the City of Sydney alone, nearly 20% of people sleeping rough are non-residents on uncertain visas, including asylum seekers.Over the years, successive Federal Governments have reduced Status Resolution Support Services (SRSS) funding and eligibility and removed many non-residents’ work rights and access to Medicare, while the NSW State Government has excluded non-residents from homelessness support. Consequently, non-residents are locked out of mainstream social services and there is no safety net in place to prevent destitution and homelessness. The RCOA reported that currently, charities and frontline asylum services are left to fill the gap. They provide food, emergency accommodation, rent assistance, transport and healthcare but with little or no government funding. These services are stretched beyond capacity and rely heavily on donations and community goodwill.The Asylum Seekers Centre (ASC) reported in 2024 that homelessness is detrimental to the welfare and mental health of non-residents. Subsequently, this affects their ability to lodge and progress visa applications. This motion is about giving all non-residents and asylum seekers access to homelessness support. No one should be excluded based on their visa status!
MOTION
(This ….… branch/SEC) recognises that the right to housing is a human right. To ensure that everyone is eligible for homelessness support, we call on the NSW Labor Government to include non-residents and asylum seekers in the NSW Homelessness Strategy 2025-2035.
Send to:NSW Minister for Housing, Minister for Homelessness, Rose Jackson MLC at office@jackson.minister.nsw.gov.auYour SECBranch/SEC Secretaries to submit motion to NSW Labor through the Online Policy Motions Portal by the deadline of 3 April 2026.You can access a PDF copy of the motion at L4RNSWStateConferenceMotion2026 Hope to see you online at our 25 February meeting.
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The Admin Review Tribunal, the first 6 months – Labor for Refugees NSW/ACT
In October 2024, the Administrative Review Tribunal replaced the Administrative Appeals Tribunal, with various new objectives, features, processes and powers. In December 2024 the Administrative Review Council was re-established with an objective of monitoring and advising on the operation and integrity of Australia’s administrative law system. These developments reflect a significant (re) commitment to the values and principles which underpinned the administrative law reforms of the 1970s.In this seminar Professor Margaret Allars SC, Chair of the Administrative Review Council and Simone Burford, Deputy President and Jurisdictional Lead – Protection of the ART will explore the first six months of the new Tribunal’s operation, and the prospects for the revived ARC.
This online seminar (via Zoom) is hosted by the UNSW Gilbert + Tobin Centre of Public Law and the Australian Institute of Administrative Law (NSW).
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L4R NEWSLETTER NOVEMBER 2025 – Labor for Refugees NSW/ACT
Jenny HainesNovember 20, 2025Uncategorized
Meeting with Immigration Minister Tony Burke Our L4R National Co-ordinating Committee (NCC), met with the Immigration Minister on 15 October last.
The following report was compiled by our NSW/ACT Co-Convenor Lauren Honcope. L4R National Co-ordinating Committee Meeting with the Minister for Home Affairs Tony Burke on Wednesday 15 October 2025, at his electoral office in Punchbowl.In attendance for L4R NCC – NCC Secretary Nizza Siano, NCC NSW members Jenny Haines (NSW/ACT Co-Convenor), Sabrin Farooqui (NSW/ACT Senior Vice-President), NCC ACT member Lauren Honcope (NSW/ACT Co-Convenor), NCC Qld member Hanne Worsoe (Convenor L4R Qld). In attendance with the Minister – Rachelle Harika (electoral office) and Ann Clark (Ministerial staffer, virtually, via screen). Topics covered and who spoke to them –1. Visa Backlog/Legacy caseload from previous government’s so-called ‘Fast Track’ system and recent information concerning pathways through Ministerial Intervention, for permanent settlement – Lauren2. The very poor health status of a few of the remaining men in the PNG (Manus) cohort who are still in Port Moresby – Hanne3. Nauru – the severe health risks and the policy problems of the Labor government’s –
(a) continuing use of Nauru as a location that Australia sends people, who try to reach Australia by boat to claim asylum; and(b) new use of Nauru as a place of permanent settlement of non-citizens with ‘character issues’ – L4R’s longstanding opposition to offshoring of any kind. Jenny spoke on this.4. The 2023 ALP Platform – 4 KEY Policies in the 2023 ALP National Platform Commitments which have not progressed so far, and on which we sought an update:
(a) Legislating the “90 Day Rule” – at 2023 Platform, page 141, para 7 and page 142 para 8.h – when will we see in this Parliament, ALP Legislation to enact this ALP Platform commitment to 90 day Rule?
(b) Establishing a Parliamentary Inquiry into Immigration Detention – at 2023 Platform page 141 paragraph 4 – will this be established prior to 2026 National Conference? The NCC has written to the Attorney- General about this.
(c) Establishment of a Special Envoy for refugees – at 2023 Platform, page 134 paragraph 11 – will this Special Envoy be appointed prior to 2026 National Conference?
(d) What are the Second Albanese Labor Government’s Attitudes/Plans in relation to Platform commitments to aspiring to 27,000 government funded Humanitarian places per year – at 2023 Platform, page 138, paragraph 8. L4R recently wrote to the Immigration Minister about increasing the intake to 50,000 within five years. Lauren spoke on item 4.
Summary of meetingThe meeting went smoothly, thanks to Sabrin’s organisation beforehand and management of time on topics in the meeting.
The Minister and staff were welcoming and friendly, as we would expect. They are clearly also very busy.
The Minister is, of course, very senior (he is manager of business in the House as well as his Ministerial roles) and highly experienced, including in this portfolio, which he briefly held in 2013 when Kevin Rudd was PM the second time.He was very interested to know the issues of concern to L4R and quickly addressed the issues from his perspective as Minister. He clearly stated his strong policy preferences that differ from those of L4R (notably re PNG and Nauru). He was very helpful re the current program of providing visa certainty for people in legacy caseload(s). He was interested in the 4 Platform items we raised with him but non-committal, saying that he would meet with L4R representatives again. I think we established a rapport and some trust. The meeting lasted 30 minutes (11am to 11.30am).Lauren HoncopeCo-Convenor
L4R NSW/ACT
Next Year’s NSW and National ALP Conferences NSW Conference 4 and 5 JulyWe need to decide about which issue L4R should advocate at the 2026 NSW ALP Conference. It should be something which can make a positive contribution for refugees and people seeking asylum in NSW. It would be good to see if we can improve their lives, particularly if they are struggling financially. One issue could be the restoration of the Status Resolution Support Service (SRSS).
The SRSS provides a basic temporary payment to non-citizens who cannot support themselves while waiting for a resolution to their immigration claim. Designed as a “safety net” and first implemented in 1992 as the Asylum Seeker Assistance Scheme, the payments were essential for people whose visas forbade them to work, or who were sick or parenting young children. Since the safety net was established, a number of policy changes have been made. Successive governments have cut funding by 93 per cent.
One in five people sleeping rough in the inner city has uncertain visa status, according to data from the City of Sydney. The Asylum Seekers Centre now estimates every second person seeking help from its centre is either homeless or at serious risk of homelessness. On a daily basis, staff are seeing people who are homeless with no access to work, Medicare or basic services. People arrive at the centre after having slept in the CBD, Parramatta, in parks or streets. Staff attend to mothers with children arriving at the centre after having spent the night at a train station. National Conference 23, 24 & 25 August
We have already commenced working on Labor’s National Platform in the lead up to the 2026 ALP National Conference and will advocate for the Labor Government to meet its commitment and implement the refugee policies that L4R negotiated for and won at the 2023 National Conference. Four of these policies are mentioned in the Report of our recent meeting with the Immigration Minister, Tony Burke. We are also currently speaking to those ALP Members who were recently elected to the National Policy Forum (NPF), asking them to advocate for our L4R policies. In NSW, we have already met with Linda Scott, who was the past Co-Convenor of L4R. Linda nominated and ran in the NPF election on a platform that included support for our L4R policies.The problem is that we need to cut through and impress upon Labor MPs, the importance of supporting refugees and people seeking asylum. We are aware that refugees are not uppermost in the minds of Labor politicians (except of course if something controversial happens). The lack of interest in improving the circumstances for refugees living in Australia and towards those desperately fleeing their countries, who would like to settle in Australia, is most likely a reflection of how the community prioritises refugees. Our community is more focused on their own economic woes, housing and the environment, than on the plight of refugees.Secondly, there were no time-lines included in the National Platform commitments made in 2023, so the Government is able to defer the implementation of these policies and focus on what it believes are more important issues. The implementation of some of these policies are also reliant on the allocation of funds so that’s another challenge we face. Another reason refugees don’t feature prominently by the Government is that the Government would like refugees to stay out of sight and therefore, out of mind. The government does not wish to provide the Coalition and right-wing media, with ammunition to wedge it as the Coalition has tried to do each time refugees are in the limelight. L4R believes that with the Coalition in such chaos and the Labor Government still in the early stage of its three year term, the government can afford to implement reforms, without fearing the adverse reaction it may attract. For far too long, we have used the excuse that we cannot afford to be controversial when it comes to refugees, because it might undermine Labor’s chance of winning at election time. Well if now is not the time to be bold, when will it ever be the appropriate time for a Labor Government to introduce reforms?
Labor for Refugees Victoria – newsletterI recommend reading the recent newsletter compiled by L4R Victoria as it’s full of useful and interesting information and focuses on the Albanese Government’s record on refugees and people seeking asylum. The link follows L4RVicNewsletterNov25 Report of Kaldor Centre Conference 23 October 2025 – Building Bridges: Advanced Refugee Protection in a Divided World This year’s Kaldor Centre Conference arrived at a fateful time for refugee protection. Displacement is rising by the millions. Funding is vanishing by the billions. Political divides are deepening around the world. Now more than ever, we need to pause, reflect and forge new paths forward – together.
The 2025 Kaldor Centre Conference brought together policymakers, practitioners, scholars, civil society and people with lived experience of displacement – to ask the hard questions, share expertise and build practical solutions. The Kaldor Centre described the conference as “a vital meeting point for everyone working to shape refugee policy and practice”.
L4R member Cath Crittenden attended this Conference and took notes in point form which she made available to us. Her notes follow: · It’s not rewriting the Refugee Convention that is needed; it is connection, fair and fast procedures, and responsibility sharing.· Crucial to include people with lived experience when developing policy (nothing about us without us).
Mohammed Naeem, Senior Director for Advocacy Strategy, Refugees International:· there are leaders, and there are those who lead; we need to remain hopeful; a shared understanding of the issues is failing, and so is shared responsibility; we are reckoning with a crisis of trust; we need a bridge in an age which profits from breaking (clearly the Trump administration front of mind); but citizens are not as polarised as politicians. We need to show that caring works; we need to make the case for the benefits to society of good refugee policy; we need refugee leaders in discussions. One third of Americans have contact with a refugee. The system is not broken, it’s overburdened. We’re too ready to absorb ideas that are constantly repeated; we experience confirmation bias. There is power in listening, even if you don’t agree, but we look for shared values. Community sponsorship programs are excellent at building bridges.
James Jegasothy, Deputy CEO, Multicultural NSW; Hugh de Kretser, President Australian Human Rights Commission:· New deal with Nauru, no procedural fairness and heart-breaking human cost.· There is a better way. Safe pathways to protection. Work with regional countries, save lives at sea, support the UNHCR, increase the refugee intake (Australia currently 77th in the world relative to GDP); increase complementary pathways. Be more humane, lead others, don’t follow. Promote peace.· Australia has a strong multicultural culture, but we can’t be complacent about racism.· We need to establish a Human Rights Act; we need to promote the National Anti-Racism Framework.· We need to listen to refugees tell their stories; that way, understanding and empathy will develop.These are wise words and the world would be a more compassionate place if we all heeded them. Australia, International Law and Armed Conflict: What are our obligations? You would have received an email from us early this month, inviting you to this important event which takes place next week on Thursday 27 November. You will need to register to attend.The details are outlined in the leaflet which you can access using the following link IntLawArmedConflictevent27Nov25
I hope to see you at our Zoom meeting next Wednesday – the last for this year.
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L4R OCTOBER NEWSLETTER 2025 – Labor for Refugees NSW/ACT
Jenny HainesOctober 22, 2025Uncategorized
Meeting with Immigration Minister Tony Burke
Our L4R National Co-ordinating Committee, managed to secure a meeting with the Immigration Minister which will take place this morning the 15 October.We have prioritised the issues we wish to raise with the Minister and will follow up some of the topics of concern we have conveyed to him through our letters over the past 12 months. The outcome of our meeting will be reported to members at our Zoom meeting next Wednesday evening. Please try to attend. Increase Australia’s humanitarian intake
On the 23 September last, we wrote to the Immigration Minister Tony Burke, in support of the Asylum Seeker Resource Centre’s (ASRC) campaign to increase Australia’s humanitarian intake to 50,000 places within 5 years. Currently, Labor’s National Platform states “Labor aspires to progressively increase Australia’s government funded humanitarian intake to 27,000 places per year”.
We believe that there is a critical need for increased intake given the record numbers of displaced people globally.
Our reasons for urging this increase, can be read in our letter to the Minister L4RIncreaseRefugeeNos23Sep25
Financial Assistance Sought
Some of those refugees who are being transitioned by the Government from Temporary Protection and Safe Haven Enterprise Visas to permanency, are experiencing financial hardship. There are a number who are not eligible to access Medicare or claim Centrelink benefits for four years after receiving permanent visas so are experiencing poverty and are struggling. We have written to the Immigration Minister, asking him if there is a possibility of short-term access to special benefits for those demonstrating hardship. Our letter follows L4RFinancialHardship1Oct25
We hope you can make it to our meeting next week.
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Labor in government – from 21 May 2022 – Labor for Refugees NSW/ACT
5 August 2022 The ‘Biloela’/Nadesalingam family settled in Biloela, Queensland
29 October 2022 Australian women and children being repatriated from Al Hawl and al-Roj camps in Northern Syria
19 November 2022 Travel outside Australia possible for holders of temporary visas
10 February 2023 Family reunion pathway restored for some refugees
12 February 2023 The end of temporary visas for refugees
25 June 2023 Last of Nauru detainees brought to Australia (but sadly more people seeking asylum imprisoned on Nauru since September 2023)
10 September 2023 Neil Para granted permanent residency after walk from Ballarat
5 October 2023 Labor to prioritise new asylum seeker claims
16 December 2023 Enhanced support for refugees globally
30 January 2024 Establishment of the Refugee Advisory Panel
11 October 2024 NSW Labor Government announces major funding boost for Asylum Seekers Centre