Wednesday, 16 June 2021

Biloela asylum seeker family members reunited in Perth hospital with Tharnicaa.

 Extract from ABC News

, A man and child in the back of a car.
Kopika and Nades were taken directly from the airport to Perth Children's Hospital after being flown from Christmas Island.
(ABC News)

The father and sister of a sick four-year-old Tamil asylum seeker medically evacuated to Perth from Christmas Island, where her family has been detained since 2019, have arrived to support her.

The Murugappan family had been separated for a week after their youngest daughter, Tharnicaa, was flown to Perth for treatment for a blood infection.

Tharnicaa's mother, Priya, was allowed to accompany her to Perth, but her father, known as Nades, and her older sister, Kopika, were left on the island.

Nades and Kopika were put on a flight and flown to Perth on Tuesday, where they will be permitted to stay under a community detention order.

A small group of supporters accompanied them to the island's airport and waved goodbye as the plane took off.

A man and a little girl wave on an airport tarmac.

Nades and Kopika Murugappan had been held in immigration detention on Christmas Island since 2018. 
(Supplied: @HomeToBilo)

More supporters gathered at Perth Airport to welcome them, carrying balloons and signs saying "Let Them Stay" and "Let them Live in Australia Permanently".

The pair were taken in a car and driven to Perth Children's Hospital, where they were reunited with Tharnicaa and Priya.

A man smiling as he holds his young daughter in front of an airport fence.

Nades Murugappan and Kopika left Christmas Island to be reunited with Priya and Tharnicaa in Perth.
(Supplied: @HomeToBilo)

The reunion comes after Federal Immigration Minister Alex Hawke on Tuesday announced the family would be permitted to reside in suburban Perth, close to schools and support services, via a "community detention placement".

A man and his daughter walk up the steps of a plane waving.

Nades Murugappan and his daughter Kopika left Christmas Island on Tuesday, bound for Perth.
(Supplied: @HomeToBilo)

Western Australia's Health Department had asked the Department of Home Affairs to reunite the family in Perth for Tharnicaa's medical and psychological wellbeing, based on advice from her doctors.

While Tharnicaa, who spent her fourth birthday at Perth Children's Hospital was in a stable condition, doctors said she was not yet fit to be discharged and could spend several more weeks in hospital.Tharnicaa lying in bed looking sad, holding stuffed toy cockatoo.

Tharnicaa is receiving treatment for sepsis in Perth Children's Hospital.
(Supplied: Angela Fredericks)

WA Health also asked for permission for the family to remain in the city because she would need ongoing specialised medical care.

Family spent three years in detention

The Murugappans — who are of Tamil ethnicity — have been facing a three-year legal battle against the Australian government, which wants them deported to Sri Lanka.

Pressure has been mounting on the Commonwealth to let the family return to Biloela, in central Queensland, where they were living before being taken into detention in 2018, when their bridging visas expired.

A father and mother with their two daughters.

Nades and Priya Murugappan want to settle in Australia, and return to the central Queensland town where the girls were born.
(Supplied: Angela Fredericks)

Supporters in Perth and across the nation have been holding rallies and vigils, calling on the government to let the family stay in the country.

The WA Premier has called on the Commonwealth to provide the family with certainty about the future.

Prime Minister Scott Morrison said earlier this week that the family would not be settled in Australia.

Mr Hawke said the community detention placement was not a pathway to permanent settlement.

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