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Taito Phillip Field—Advice to Associate Minister of Immigration

Thursday 24 August 2006 Hansard source (external site)

Smith8. Dr the Hon LOCKWOOD SMITH (National—Rodney) Link to this
to the Minister of Immigration

When he told the House on Wednesday, 26 July that his department “attempted to ensure that Mr O’Connor was in receipt of relevant information from Samoa about Mr Field’s relationship with Mr Siriwan”, how effectively did his department achieve that?

CunliffeHon DAVID CUNLIFFE (Minister of Immigration) Link to this

As I have previously stated in this House, I concur with the Secretary of Labour’s view that the department’s processes could be strengthened to ensure in future that decision makers have access to all relevant information.

SmithDr the Hon Lockwood Smith Link to this

Is it correct that six sections of the department—namely, the Apia branch, the immigration intelligence unit, the Pacific division, the service international section, the short-term overstayers compliance team, and the failed refugee compliance team—were all in possession of the information that Mr Siriwan was working on Taito Phillip Field’s house in Samoa at the time the Minister was considering his immigration case; if so, how many sections of his department have to be in possession of relevant information before the Minister is told about it?

CunliffeHon DAVID CUNLIFFE Link to this

It has been accepted by the Ingram inquiry that what is most likely to have occurred in this instance is that the Minister’s private secretary was informed but did not pass that information to the Minister because of the unconfirmed nature of the allegations.

SmithDr the Hon Lockwood Smith Link to this

Is it correct that the Apia branch, the immigration intelligence unit, the Pacific division, the service international section, the short-term overstayers compliance team, and the failed refugee compliance team were all in possession of the information that Mr Siriwan was working on Taito Phillip Field’s house in Samoa at the time the Minister’s department prepared the briefing for Mr O’Connor for his decision; and does the Minister really expect the public to believe that all six of those sections of his department coincidentally just forgot to pass on that information in their briefing to Mr O’Connor?

CunliffeHon DAVID CUNLIFFE Link to this

I expect the public to believe the findings of the Ingram report, which are quite clear on that matter.

SmithDr the Hon Lockwood Smith Link to this

Is it correct that of the six sections of the department that were in possession of the information about Mr Siriwan and Taito Phillip Field, the Apia branch manager believed “Damien knew about that before he made the decision.”; if so, how many of the other five sections of the department also believed that the Minister knew, prior to making his decision?

CunliffeHon DAVID CUNLIFFE Link to this

That matter has also been thoroughly traversed in the Ingram report. Mr Ingram found that the likelihood was that Mr Dalmer’s understanding—the Apia manager—was incorrect.

SmithDr the Hon Lockwood Smith Link to this

When Mr Field had written to the Associate Minister on 18 May claiming that the Minister had decided to consider favourably a 2-year work permit for Mr Siriwan and to cancel the deportation order on his spouse, is it reasonable to assume that the Associate Minister’s office would have been well aware of the Siriwan case; and how then does he explain the Associate Minister’s office forgetting a 5-minute phone call from the group manager of the service international unit of the Immigration Service querying whether the Associate Minister was aware of all the information they had on Phillip Field’s involvement with Siriwan?

CunliffeHon DAVID CUNLIFFE Link to this

Mr Ingram concludes that the Minister’s private secretary advised him some time after the decision was made on the 23rd, and before her conversation with the Apia manager and others on the 28th.

SmithDr the Hon Lockwood Smith Link to this

How competent does it make his office, and the office of the Associate Minister, appear when he supports the claim that a direct call from a senior departmental manager to the Associate Minister’s office, querying whether the Associate Minister was aware of the serious issues surrounding Mr Field’s involvement with Mr Siriwan, could just be forgotten, and when the letter from Keith Williams to the Minister of Immigration, detailing the seriousness of those issues, was not received by the Minister for 6 weeks, as he alleged in this House yesterday, or are these lapses in both offices just part of an elaborate cover-up to quarantine the damage from the Phillip Field saga?

CunliffeHon DAVID CUNLIFFE Link to this

It is unbefitting of the member to make such allegations against officials. The chief executive stated on 13 April 2006 that the department did not meet the standard of ensuring that all relevant information held by the department was demonstrably available to the decision maker—the Minister.

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