Skip to main content

AUSTRALIA'S CITIZENSHIP ROW; DUTY PM QUITS




Australia's centre-right government has lost its majority after the deputy prime minister was declared ineligible for parliament.
@TheGlobe reporters.

Barnaby Joyce is one of seven politicians affected by a High Court decision which disqualifies him because he held dual citizenship when he ran for election last year.
The crisis relates to a previously obscure 116-year-old law barring dual citizens from sitting in parliament.
Mr Joyce said: "I respect the verdict of the court.
"It's a pretty simple story - we're off to a by-election.
"I had no reason to believe that, you know, I was a citizen of any other country than Australia. That is the way it is.
"Now I am going to make sure that I don't cry in my beer."
The court's decision means the Liberal-led coalition government loses its one-seat majority in the lower House of Representatives as it awaits the by-election for Mr Joyce's seat in December.
Mr Joyce will be able to stand for re-election, however, having renounced his New Zealand citizenship since the last election. He is expected to win.
Four of the other six senators were also ruled ineligible from sitting in parliament, including government minister Fiona Nash, who inherited British citizenship through her father.
The others were the Greens' Larissa Waters and Scott Ludlam and One Nation's Malcolm Roberts.
All said they had not been aware of their dual citizenship when they ran for election.
The disqualified senators will be replaced by members of their own party without an election, meaning the balance of power will only be affected by Mr Joyce's situation.
The saga began for Mr Joyce in July after media inquiries to his office made him aware he might hold dual citizenship through his father, James Joyce.
The New Zealand High Commission told him he had been a New Zealand citizen in August and he renounced his citizenship after that.
The government had unsuccessfully argued in court that the phrase in the law "is a subject or a citizen... of a foreign power" should only refer to a person who has voluntarily retained that status.
But the court found Mr Joyce was a New Zealander by descent at the time of his nomination last year.
The two senators allowed to stay in parliament were Matt Canavan, who the court heard might have inherited Italian citizenship from his Australian-born mother through Italian grandparents; and Nick Xenophon, who was born to Cypriot and Greek parents and had checked with both embassies to ensure he wasn't a citizen of those countries.
He later found he was British because his father left Cyprus while it was a British colony.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

TOURISM: NIGERIA

The temple of  Yoruba  goddess  Oshun at  Osun-Osogbo , an attraction for pilgrims and tourists alike. African Bush Elephants  in  Yankari National Park ,  Bauchi State . Tourism in  Nigeria  centers largely on events, due to the country's ample amount of ethnic groups, but also includes  rain forests ,  savannah ,  waterfalls , and other natural attractions. Not also forgetting the enormous potentials of its hospitality sector which is capable of giving you a treat of a life time. The climatic condition in the country is welcoming and the transportation system is most of all adventurous. Come! Visit Nigeria and experience the pleasures of Paradise. Adventure awaits you!

U.S LAW MAKER CALLS FOR MORE VETTING OF PAKISTANS PASSENGERS

  President Trump said the New York attacker, Sayfullo Habibullaevic Saipov, who plowed a pickup truck down a crowded bike path near the World Trade Centre, was allowed to enter the US under the "Diversity Lottery Programme" President Donald Trump vowed that he will terminate the popular green card lottery. Washington:  A top American lawmaker today called for "more vetting" of people coming in the US from Pakistan, blaming the country of having large terrorist presence. President Donald Trump yesterday vowed that he will terminate the popular green card lottery after an ISIS-inspired Uzbek man who entered the US under the programme killed eight people in New York in the deadliest terror attack in the country since 9/11.  "If a person is coming from a country which has a strong terrorist presence, there should be more intense vetting and investigation than there would be from someone not coming from a country similar to that,...

PARENTS OCCUPY CATALAN SCHOOLS AHEAD OF POLL

The Latest on Catalonia's plans to hold a referendum Sunday on breaking away from Spain (all times local) 8 p.m. Ruben Satinya wasn't sure he would vote in favor of independence for Catalonia in Sunday's disputed referendum, but the Spanish government's effort to prevent the poll from taking place has convinced him to vote in favor of a break with Spain. He is spending the night at his child's Congres-Indians school in Barcelona, hoping to be joined by many other activists before police are expected arrive at 6 a.m. Sunday to clear the school to keep it from being used as a voting station. Satinya doesn't expect police to forcibly take them out of the school if the crowd is large enough to make removals difficult. He says "I am Catalan, but my fight is for social and civil rights, and that is what this about." He adds "I believe in the basic right of self-determination." ——— 6:00 p.m. A grassroots group tha...