Immigrant Family Denied Australian Residency Due to Down Syndrome Son

I really hope this is something that Australian authorities will be able to rectify:

Thirteen-year-old Lukas Moeller has Down syndrome. His father is a doctor who came to Australia from Germany to help fill a shortage of physicians in rural communities.

But now Australia has rejected Dr. Bernhard Moeller’s application for residency, saying Lukas does not meet the “health requirement” and would pose a burden on taxpayers for his medical care, education and other services.

The case has provoked an outcry in the rural region of southeastern Victoria state, where Moeller is the only internal medicine specialist for a community of 54,000 people. Residents rallied outside Moeller’s practice this week, demanding that the decision be overturned, and hundreds of Internet and radio complaints from across the country bombarded media outlets Friday.

Moeller vowed to fight the immigration department ruling.

“We like to live here, we have settled in well, we are welcomed by the community here, and we don’t want to give up just because the federal government doesn’t welcome my son,” he said Friday.

The doctor has powerful supporters. Victoria Premier John Brumby has pledged to support the family’s appeal, and federal Health Minister Nicola Roxon said Friday that she would speak to the immigration minister about the case.

Moeller moved to Australia two years ago with his wife, Isabella, their daughter, Sarah, 21, and sons Lukas and Felix, 17, to help fill a critical need for doctors in rural areas. They settled in Horsham, a town of 20,000 about 100 miles northwest of Melbourne.

Moeller’s temporary work visa is valid until 2010, but his application for permanent residence was rejected this week.  [CNN]

Horsham is a small town along Highway A8 in between Melbourne and Adelaide.  It is mostly an agricultural community.  There is really nothing there for tourists but it is a good place to use as a launching point to tour around the Grampians.

It is a town that would be hard to get a qualified doctor like Dr. Moeller to locate to.  As long as Dr. Moeller is working and paying taxes I do not see how his son can be considered a drag on the Australian taxpayer due to any treatment he may need?  This whole issue has the appearance of uncaring bureaucracy written all over it and I’m willing to bet some oversight from elected officials will get this situation rectified especially since it is currently on the front page of CNN.

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