Schedule 3 Waiver Secured at AAT Based on Same-Sex Persecution and Community Contributions
Case Summary
An applicant who had become unlawful over three years — without his knowledge, after his prior agent failed to inform him that his student visa had been granted — had his Schedule 3 waiver refused by the Department. We succeeded at the AAT by grounding the argument in the risk of persecution the applicant would face as a same-sex person in his home country, and his contributions to Australia's academic community.
Background
Our client had instructed a prior migration agent to apply for a student visa. The visa was refused, but following an MRT review, it was remitted and granted. The prior agent failed to inform the client of the grant. The student visa eventually expired without the client's knowledge, leaving him unlawful for over three years. During this period he met his sponsor and entered into a genuine committed same-sex relationship. When he sought to obtain a partner visa, the Schedule 3 waiver was refused by the Department. We represented him at the AAT.
Challenges
- Unlawfulness arose because the prior agent failed to notify the client of the student visa grant
- Over three years of unintentional unlawfulness created a difficult immigration background
- Department refused the Schedule 3 waiver despite the circumstances
- Both the same-sex persecution risk and community contributions arguments needed to be developed and substantiated
Outcome
The AAT remitted the matter with a direction that the Schedule 3 criteria were met. The Subclass 820 Partner Visa was granted.
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