Family of Pakistani student in Australia denied visa to visit dying son

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The Australian High Commission in Islamabad has denied visit visas to a dying Pakistani student’s family, saying it was not satisfied the mother and brother will return to the home country.

Twenty-four year old Hassan Asif who is currently in the care of a Melbourne City Mission youth homelessness refuge has only weeks to live.

The Mission has urged Australia’s immigration minister Peter Dutton to review the decision.

”Melbourne City Mission believes it is unconscionable that this young man — who has family — be allowed to die without a loved one by his side.”

Asif went to Australia on a student visa in 2004, before being diagnosed with advanced skin cancer in April this year. The cancer progressed into terminal stage last month.

Asif himself has appealed to the Department of Immigration and Border Protection to allow his mother and brother to travel to Australia to be by his side.

“Simply, I would be honest and say that these are my last days and I’m dying, and I just want my family to be here with me,” Asif said in an interview with Daily Mail Australia. “My mum is very sad – she cries a lot and just wants to be here with me during this time.”

“I don’t have many friends here because before I was diagnosed, most of my time was spent working or studying,” Asif added.

Asif’s lawyer, however, is in the process of filing the family’s visa applications again with fresh supporting documents, hoping for an urgent Immigration Department change of heart.

His oncologist at Melbourne’s Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre wrote a letter of support in October to facilitate Asif’s family’s visa application, saying the treatment had ceased and he would soon enter the “terminal phase”.

“They are my family, I want them to be with me in those last days,” Asif told Herald Sun. “I’m OK with dying. It’s just the pain and everything, it’s getting so hard. Everything is getting worse, my right eye is shut totally now.”

Melbourne City Mission, the organisation Asif is in the care of, has put up a page titled ‘Hassan’s Dying Wish’, with phone numbers and links to appeal to Australia’s immigration minister Peter Dutton to “re-open Hassan’s case and review the decision”.

3 COMMENTS

  1. Perhaps a flight home to Pakistan so he could be with his family before he goes to his maker might be an available, if he is well enough to travel I am sure a first class ticket, might be arranged by the people looking after him.

    • The Australian government can surely afford to provide him a plane ticket if he is able to make his journey back home.

    • I read in another news website where he was thinking of going back to Pakistan, but he is too ill to fly.

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