Last Updated: Monday, 05 June 2023, 10:55 GMT

Australia: Refugee Review Tribunal

The Refugee Review Tribunal was a statutory body which provided a final, independent, merits review of decisions made by the Minister for Immigration and Citizenship or, in practice, by officers of the Department of Immigration and Citizenship (DIAC), acting as delegates of the Minister, to refuse to grant protection visas to non-citizens within Australia, or to cancel protection visas held by non-citizens in Australia. The Tribunal was established in 1993 under Part 7 of the Act and replaced the Refugee Status Review Committee (RSRC). On 1 July 2015 the Refugee Review Tribunal was amalgamated into the Administrative Appeals Tribunal.  Website: www.aat.gov.au/
Selected filters: Query Responses Uighur
Filter:
Showing 1-8 of 8 results
China: 1. Deleted. 2. What was the security situation in Guohan Yuan, Urumqi in September 2009; for example, was it safe to walk around and was there a large police presence? 3. Deleted. 4. Are there any reports of Uighurs holding prominent positions in the PSB in Xingjian? If yes, are they expected to a) become members of the Chinese Communist Party and b) assimilate into Han Chinese culture? 5. Are there any indications that prominent Uighurs are not subject to the same level of social and government harassment as ordinary Uighurs? 6. Deleted. 7. Please provide general background information on Uighur culture and also on how males and females actually practice their religion.

17 February 2012 | Publisher: Australia: Refugee Review Tribunal | Document type: Query Responses

China: 1. Please provide an analysis of the situation in China for Uighurs now and in the reasonably foreseeable future. 2. Please provide any available information about what usually happens when a person is taken into detention for interrogation in China e.g. documents that are completed; particular places of detention in Tianjin, etc.

9 May 2011 | Publisher: Australia: Refugee Review Tribunal | Document type: Query Responses

China: 1. Although circumstances are not good for Uighurs in PRC generally, are there places where the situation is less oppressive for them or where they are more likely to be left alone by the authorities? 2. Have there been any significant changes/events relating to the PRC authorities and Uighurs in East Turkistan in recent months?

13 May 2010 | Publisher: Australia: Refugee Review Tribunal | Document type: Query Responses

China: 1. What is the current social, political and economic situation for Islamic Uighurs in Urumqi? 2. Please provide concise information concerning Rabiya Kadeer, and her visit to Sydney in early 2008

25 August 2008 | Publisher: Australia: Refugee Review Tribunal | Document type: Query Responses

China: 1. Is there any information on when East Turkistan Liberation Party (ETLP) was formed, who its leaders have been and whether the ETLP was active in the 1980's? 2. Do you have any information about Hoja Niyaz Haji, supposedly East Turkistan Liberation Army's second leader? 3. Do we know what specific acts ETLP has been involved in? 4. Is ETLP an arm of the East Turkistan Liberation Movement? 5. Are there any reports of an incident on 3 May 1981 when an explosion occurred at the Xinjiang Autonomous Region People's Hospital? 6. Is there any information on a big demonstration which took place on 18 May 1989 when a few thousand Uighur demonstrators were arrested? 7. What information is there about a demonstration which took place in February 1997 in Gulja? 8. Are you able to list (without too much detail) the major demonstrations/events which Uighur protestors have organised from 1989 to 2006? 9. Do you have any information about the demonstration organised by Australian Uighurs on 1 Oct 2006 in Camperdown? 10. Question deleted

14 March 2007 | Publisher: Australia: Refugee Review Tribunal | Document type: Query Responses

China: 1. It was just announced by the Chinese government last month, that it is now law that any Uighur cannot visit 5 countries from China, Kazakhstan, Kurkestan, Uzbekistan, Turkey and Pakistan. This clearly is a further clamp down on Uighurs and their rights. 2. The Chinese authorities have confiscated all passports in Shinjiang from all the households and families there. 3. 3000 Uighurs who were on a pilgrimage to Mecca and Pakistan were all arrested and imprisoned on their recent return to China

9 February 2007 | Publisher: Australia: Refugee Review Tribunal | Document type: Query Responses

China: 1. Is there a movement known as the Xinjiang Independence Movement operating in China today? If so, please provide full details of the movement, its operations and major participants? 2. How does the Chinese government treat members of this Xinjiang Independence Movement? 3. Is there any evidence to suggest that business associates of members of such a movement may be imputed with an opinion supportive of this movement and, if so, how are such business associates treated in China? 4. Question deleted. 5. Is there any evidence that persons who have made applications for protection in Australia are harmed or persecuted in any way upon return to China by local authorities because they made such application or for any other reason?

20 January 2006 | Publisher: Australia: Refugee Review Tribunal | Document type: Query Responses

China: 1. Please provide information about the Eastern Turkistan Liberation Party. Is it a terrorist organization? 2. Question deleted. 3. Please advise as to the dissatisfaction with the PRC government held by the Uighur people. 4. Is there a restriction of no more than two children for Uighurs? How well is this enforced? 5. What are the requirements now for a person such as the applicant to depart the PRC by air from Beijing?

12 January 2006 | Publisher: Australia: Refugee Review Tribunal | Document type: Query Responses

Search Refworld