Warm
welcome, Kiwi style
New Zealand immigration official subjects Vietnamese businessman to harrowing
ordeal
A view of
Auckland City. A Vietnamese entrepreneur
looking to invest in New
Zealand says he was repulsed by
discriminatory treatment by an immigration official there. PHOTO:
SCENERY-WALLPAPERS.COM
Around the middle of last year, a friend told me about his plans to open a
business in Auckland, New Zealand. He said the
potential was great and had the advantage of allowing his family to live in a
beautiful place and his children to benefit from good quality education
abroad.
Curious, I asked for more information
and learned that my friend was taking advantage of a program under which
foreigners can register to do business in New Zealand and be issued a long
term business visa (LTBV) if they satisfied certain criteria. My friend
introduced me to a legally accredited immigration advisor who had assisted
him and his family with the documents.
I found that I could meet the
criteria for getting the LTBV, but wanted to see and get a feel for the
country before deciding to apply. I asked the advisor to arrange a visit to New Zealand,
authorizing him to submit documents for getting a visitor’s visa in
mid-November 2012.
Since it was estimated that the visa
would be issued before Christmas, I booked my tickets and accommodation for a
stay of two weeks starting January 10. However, just before Christmas, I was
requested to submit proof of financial capacity and business experience
following the criteria of the LTBV program, even though I hadn’t officially
applied for it. I did as requested, but as of January 6, I had not received
the visa, forcing me to cancel my flight and hotel booking.
On January 8, the New Zealand consulate in Ho Chi Minh City informed me that my visa
application had been accepted. Since I had changed my plans, it was not until
March 9, 2013 that I managed to travel to New Zealand on a Singapore
Airlines flight. I set out with the enthusiasm of an entrepreneur and a
traveler to see a new country that my friend had described as strikingly
beautiful and peaceful.
After 20 hours in the air and more
time in transit, I landed in Auckland at noon,
picked up my luggage, bought some New Zealand
dollars, and headed toward the exit, looking forward to a comfortable bed at
the hotel, a nap and a good time exploring Auckland.
At the customs gate, an officer asked
me to step to the luggage check counter. I was unconcerned and happy to
oblige. For a full hour, the officer carefully searched my luggage (which
contained clothes, common medicine, two cameras and an iPad), going so far as
to examine even the seams, but found nothing unusual.
I thought the search itself was a bit
unusual, and was tired and relieved as I repacked my belongings. Then the
customs officer asked me to see the immigration officer, and my nightmare
began.
I was interviewed for more than 10
hours (with breaks in which I was made to wait), directly at first, and through
an interpreter later. They interrogated me at length about my purpose in
coming to New Zealand,
and I kept telling them the truth.
However, the officer told me that he
did not believe me. He said that I wanted to get into New Zealand to do something illegal and was
not planning to return to Vietnam.
He kept asking me questions that were ridiculous. “Why did I choose to return
to Vietnam
on that day, and not any other?” He said I had to give him a persuasive
answer; that I had to convince him I would leave New Zealand on the intended day
and would not try to stay in the country indefinitely.
He warned me that if I could not
convince him he would refuse my entry. I told him that I have a family with
two young children, a business and all my assets in Vietnam, and
that all the documentation provided to get the visa showed clearly that I was
a man of decent means.
I repeatedly told him that my
objective in New Zealand was to get a practical view of the business
environment and life in the country before deciding if I wanted to sign up
for the LTBV program. I had a clear schedule with a confirmed return air
ticket and hotel reservation. I did not have any relatives or friends in New Zealand
and I had no reason to remain there.
He said he was not persuaded. After
the long journey, the hour-long luggage check and 10 hours of questioning as
though I was a criminal, I could not think of anything else to tell him.
Tired and frustrated, I told him that if I was not granted permission to
enter the country, I would go home. The officer decided to annul my visa,
saying he was not convinced that I would return and suspected I would try to
stay on illegally in New
Zealand.
After being denied entry, at 2:00
a.m., the New Zealand
police escorted me to the earliest available flight back to Singapore. My
passport and boarding pass were handed directly to the cabin crew of
Singapore Airlines. Resentment over my treatment choked me so much that
during the 10-hour flight, I could not eat or sleep despite the extreme
fatigue.
But my ordeal was still not over.
When the plane landed in Singapore, I was asked to wait until all
passengers had disembarked and a Singaporean policeman took me to a
quarantined area to wait for the flight back to Vietnam. It was 5:00 a.m. (local
time), and I was kept in the separated area like a criminal. I was not
allowed to go out for breakfast. I was not allowed to use a mobile phone or
iPad or even to read books while waiting.
At 10:30 a.m., Singaporean police
escorted me to the flight to Vietnam.
At 12:00 p.m., on March 11, 2013, I was back at Tan Son Nhat airport, after
48 hours of flight, transit, detention, and being treated like a criminal.
Apart from the loss of money, time,
effort, the psychological damage I suffered because of the discriminatory
attitude of a New Zealand
immigration officer was severe.
Immediately after my return, I
requested my immigration advisor to send an official complaint and demand an
official explanation for my situation of being issued a visa but refused entry
to New Zealand.
The advisor informed me that an official letter had been sent to the
Immigration Department and it would take four to eight weeks for a reply. As
of today, I have not received any reply.
My New Zealand nightmare did not end
there. When I went to Singapore
on May 16 of this year for a business trip, I was detained at the immigration
office of Singapore for
more than an hour and questioned on why I was refused entry to New Zealand.
My fingerprints were taken as though I was a suspect in some crime. I have
visited Singapore
many times over the past few years and had always been treated with respect.
But now, even such a familiar country also viewed me suspiciously, because of
the irrational and unfair actions of a New Zealand officer apparently
prejudiced against the Vietnamese people.
I have visited several countries in
Europe and Southeast Asia, but I have never experienced discrimination like I
did in New Zealand.
The refusal of entry to New Zealand
has clearly had implications stretching to other countries. The sharing of my
personal information with other countries and totally unjustified treatment
as a potential criminal by the Immigration Department of New Zealand has
placed me under suspicion everywhere.
I have not harmed New Zealand
in any way or violated any of its laws or the laws of any other country, yet
the department’s actions have harmed me deeply, and they are an abuse of the
basic human rights of dignity and respect that every living being is entitled
to.
I find it difficult to believe that a
government representative of a country considered to be developed can behave
in such an irrational and inhuman manner. Why did the consulate of New Zealand in HCMC not request more
information to be satisfied that I would return to Vietnam before they issued the
visa? If in doubt, why did the consulate not interview me before issuing the
visa? Why did they have me waste my time, money and effort to fly to Auckland before
demanding more convincing proof? Did the consulate here overlook something
that caused the immigration officer to doubt the visa? Did the immigration
officer suspect that the New Zealand
consulate in HCMC was accepting bribes, as documented in the exposure of a
visa officer at the US
consulate recently? Or was it straightforward racism, as some of my friends
have suggested since?
These questions arise in my mind
because I certainly did nothing wrong in obtaining the visa and was open and
straightforward about my purpose.
I would like to make Vietnamese
people aware of the discrimination they may face when visiting New Zealand
for any reason. Maybe nothing will go wrong, but they may encounter serious
prejudice that not only causes immediate damage, but leaves a lasting impact.
For me, judging by the behavior of
its customs and immigration officers, New Zealand is no longer a
beautiful and peaceful country, but one which has citizens who discriminate
against other people, and think nothing of violating their basic human
rights.
By Nguyen Anh Tuan*
*The writer is a Vietnamese businessman who lives and works in
Ho Chi Minh City.
The opinions expressed are his own.
Thanh Nien News
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