How to apply for humanitarian asylum to Australia from A to
WITH
inside the application, then put the application in an envelope, close it, write the phone number on it, and deliver it to the Australian embassy by hand.
But if you have a #sponsor_in_Australia, you fill out the application 842 and put it in an envelope
, download the application 681 from the Internet, fill it with your information, and leave the sponsor’s information to be the one who puts it and puts it in an envelope, and sends the envelopes to your sponsor in Australia to put it in this #address: the address of the Immigration Department In Melbourne, whoever wants to introduce Form B Australia.
Postal Address:
Offshore Humanitarian Processing Center
DIMA
GPO Box 241
Melbourne
Victoria 3001
Australia
👈♦️👈 Address by courier Courier:
Offshore Humanitarian Processing Center
DIMA
2 Lonsdale Street
Melbourne
Victoria 3000
victoria.ohpc@immi.gov.au Email of the Immigration Department 👈♦️👈
Note that there is no such thing as approved by the UN or the Immigration Department in Australia
And the companies and offices that claim to be accredited are all fraud and fraud.
The possibility of accepting an asylum application without a guarantor is only 3%.
As for those who have a guarantor, the acceptance rate is 80%. Finally, the matter is in the hands of God Almighty.
B- Documents required when submitting the application. 842.
1- 8 photos of each of the applicants in the application, with the name of the individual written in English behind it.
2- A copy of the commission, if any, because it gives the file great support.
3- Passport copies, if any.
4- A copy of the marriage certificate, if any (translated).
In short, copies of all the documents you own, translated into English, and these documents are attached to the same envelope with application 842.
👈♦️👈 #Note: If you have evidence that you are persecuted and you have the evidence, you must take the evidence to a sworn translator for translation and stamping by the translator. This gives support to the file.
T - The most important reasons that the Australian Immigration Department considers strong reasons for granting you humanitarian asylum, and they are as follows, in order.
1- The measure or degree of persecution or discrimination you experienced within your country.
2- Your relationship with Australia (degree of kinship).
3- That there is no other country that can do resettlement - for example, if you are a citizen or have a valid visa for another country.
4 - The ability of the Australian community to provide you with permanent settlement.
5 - You are unable to return safely to your country of origin.
6 - To be unacceptable to settle in another country.
7- Not to have a strong family relationship or other relations with another country.
8 - You are under pressure to leave the country you are currently in.
D - Do I need to have a specific relationship with Australia to support humanitarian asylum?
And we will divide it into four preferences, which are as follows.
1- The first preference, which is the highest priority, and it is cases in dire need of resettlement in Australia, and usually these cases are from #UNHCR, especially emergency rescue visas.
2 - Applicants who have family ties in Australia, for example, a husband, wife, child, parent, brother or sister in Australia.
3- Applicants who have a grandfather or a great-grandfather, a grandson or grandson, an uncle/uncle, a nephew or sister’s son, or a cousin or nephew in Australia.
4 - Applicants who have friends or distant relatives in Australia, or who have been proposed by a legislative or cultural body or by a religious or ethnic organization in Australia.
A - Your information will help you formulate your story when applying for asylum in Australia. Here is a definition of persecution and tangible discrimination.
👈♦️👈 What is persecution?
1 Threat to life, liberty or security.
2 Harassment, detention or periodic arrest
3 Forced exile or deportation to a remote area
4 Arbitrary arrest or detention
5 Torture or cruel or inhuman treatment
6 Enslavement
7 Confiscation of property, indoctrination or rehabilitation
What is tangible discrimination?
1 Arbitrary interference with your personal life, your family, your home, your correspondence
2 Deprivation of all means of subsistence, giving unreasonably low wages or the inability to work in a suitable job.
3 Coercion to live in sub-standard housing.
4 Deportation from education.
5 Coercion to give up social or city activities.
6 Continuous monitoring or pressure at work.
7 Extirpation of citizenship rights or refusal to give you a passport.
H - To download Forms 842 and 681 from the Australian Immigration Department website with direct links.
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