Dutton stands firm against Fiji on Prakash

The home affairs minister has doubled down on stripping Neil Prakash's Australian citizenship, despite Fiji saying the IS jihadist is not an island citizen.

Neil Prakash

Melbourne-born Neil Prakash is facing terrorism charges in Turkey. Source: AAP

Home Affairs Minister Peter Dutton is standing his ground over stripping Neil Prakash of his Australian citizenship, despite concerns the Islamic State jihadist may be rendered stateless.

Fiji has categorically stated that Prakash is not a citizen, meaning he cannot legally be stripped of his Australian citizenship.

Fiji's director of immigration, Nemani Vuniwaqa, told The Sydney Morning Herald the island did not allow dual citizenship before 2009 and since Prakash was born in Australia and never applied for Fiji citizenship, he was not a citizen.

To qualify as a Fiji citizen, Prakash would have had to fulfil two conditions: register an application and live in the country for at least three out of the five years before he applied.
Human Rights Watch has slammed decisions made by Peter Dutton when he was Australia's immigration minister.
Human Rights Watch has slammed decisions made by Peter Dutton when he was Australia's immigration minister. Source: AAP
The Fijian government is adamant he has done neither.

"He is not a dual citizen. He has not applied for it," Mr Vuniwaqa said.

A spokesman for Mr Dutton said the minister made himself clear last week.

"Nothing has changed," the spokesman said on Tuesday.

Mr Dutton said last week that legal advice provided to the government about Prakash's citizenship was "very clear".

"Therefore the Citizenship Loss Board, in my judgement, got it right," he said last Wednesday.

Labor's immigration spokesman Shayne Neumann attacked Mr Dutton, saying he was happy to hit the headlines for cancelling the visa but wouldn't front up to explain his actions.

He accused the minister of embarrassing Australia and forcing Prime Minister Scott Morrison to douse diplomatic tensions with Fiji when he visits the country later this month.

"Peter Dutton is a shameless self-serving media tart on this issue," Mr Neumann told reporters in Brisbane on Tuesday.

"Talk about a mistake, how incompetent is this minister?"
Meanwhile, Mr Vuniwaqa says no one from the Australian government spoke to him on the issue.

"I was not even approached by any kind of Australian government official, not by text or SMS message, or email or telephone," he said.

"Nobody goes to my staff except through me."

Melbourne-born Prakash is in jail in Turkey facing terrorism charges.

Under Australian law, the government isn't allowed to revoke an Australian's citizenship if it will leave them stateless.


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