Close X
Friday, September 27, 2024
ADVT 
International

Saddest Story: Tragic TB Death of Indian Man Manjit Singh In Australia Highlights Immigration Flaws

Darpan News Desk IANS, 17 Aug, 2015 11:01 AM
    The death of an Indian immigrant who lived under appalling conditions in Australia has highlighted the flaws in the country's immigration system, an official said on Monday.
     
    According to Deputy State Coroner Hugh Dillon, the death of Manjit Singh was one of the saddest stories he ever heard, describing it as a "21st-century retelling" of George Orwell's "How the poor die", the Geelong Advertiser reported.
     
    Singh arrived in Australia in February 2006, thinking that his promised $43,000 a year salary would allow him to support his family in India.
     
    He was sponsored by Anmol Holdings, a company trading as north Indian flavour in Darlinghurst.
     
    The Indian was living in a slave-like condition, sleeping in the restaurant's storeroom, malnourished and working 16 hours a day with little pay.
     
    He died in 2011 from the complications of his once-latent tuberculosis, which flared up due to malnourishment, folate deficient and severe vitamin D deficiency.
     
     
    An inquest into his death was heard on Monday.
     
    Dillon said that according to counsel for department of Immigration and Border Protection (DIBP), the current system was "not broken, so there is no need to fix it".
     
    "I hope that DIBP is not so complacent that it thinks that Manjit Singh's case is unimportant for what it reveals about the potential threats to the welfare of 457 visa (temporary) holders, and for public health," Dillon said.
     
    "And I hope that DIBP is not so complacent that it believes its systems cannot be improved," he added.
     
    Dillon said he would be writing to the immigration minister about the case.
     
    He also recommended that authorities work together to find the optimal policy for ensuring the health and welfare of temporary visa holders.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    AirAsia crash: Eighth body recovered, bad weather hampers search

    AirAsia crash: Eighth body recovered, bad weather hampers search
    Another body from the victims of the crashed AirAsia plane in the Java Sea was recovered Thursday, taking the total number of bodies found till now to eight but bad weather continued to hamper the search operation.

    AirAsia crash: Eighth body recovered, bad weather hampers search

    Appeals court in Egypt orders retrial in case of 3 jailed Al-Jazeera journalists

    Appeals court in Egypt orders retrial in case of 3 jailed Al-Jazeera journalists
    CAIRO — An Egyptian appeals court ordered a retrial Thursday in the case of three Al-Jazeera English journalists held for over a year, overturning the ruling in a case that ensnared the reporters in a wider conflict between Egypt and Qatar.

    Appeals court in Egypt orders retrial in case of 3 jailed Al-Jazeera journalists

    Two-year-old Boy Accidentally Shoots Mother At A Walmart Store In Idaho

    Two-year-old Boy Accidentally Shoots Mother At A Walmart Store In Idaho
    A 29-year-old US woman was accidentally shot dead at a WalMart store in Idaho when her two-year-old son, seated in the shopping cart, grabbed a gun that was in her purse.

    Two-year-old Boy Accidentally Shoots Mother At A Walmart Store In Idaho

    Microsoft Sues Indian Company For Technical Support Scam

    Microsoft Sues Indian Company For Technical Support Scam
    In its first big strike against technical support scamming companies, Microsoft's Digital Crimes Unit (DCU) filed a civil lawsuit in federal court in the central district of California against Omnitech Support and related entities for unfair and deceptive business practices and trademark infringement

    Microsoft Sues Indian Company For Technical Support Scam

    AirAsia Flight QZ 8501: Missing Plane Debri Found In Java Sea, Bodies Retrieved

    AirAsia Flight QZ 8501: Missing Plane Debri Found In Java Sea, Bodies Retrieved
    AirAsia Tuesday confirmed that the debris spotted in the Java Sea, is from the missing flight QZ8501, even as three bodies confirmed to be those of passengers in the ill-fated plane were retrieved.

    AirAsia Flight QZ 8501: Missing Plane Debri Found In Java Sea, Bodies Retrieved

    Pakistan Court Orders Lakhvi Be Freed, India Protests

    Pakistan Court Orders Lakhvi Be Freed, India Protests
    The Islamabad High Court Monday ordered conditional release of Zakiur Rehman Lakhvi, the alleged mastermind of the 2008 Mumbai attack, drawing strong protests from India, which summoned the Pakistani envoy to "convey concern" over the development.

    Pakistan Court Orders Lakhvi Be Freed, India Protests