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Why Immigration NZ didn't ask Karel Sroubek 'obvious' question

Author
Derek Cheng, NZ Herald ,
Publish Date
Mon, 24 Dec 2018, 1:27PM
Immigration officials didn't ask Sroubek if he had been home to the Czech Republic until ordered to. (Photo / Steven McNicholl)
Immigration officials didn't ask Sroubek if he had been home to the Czech Republic until ordered to. (Photo / Steven McNicholl)

Why Immigration NZ didn't ask Karel Sroubek 'obvious' question

Author
Derek Cheng, NZ Herald ,
Publish Date
Mon, 24 Dec 2018, 1:27PM

Immigration NZ officials never asked convicted drug-smuggler Karel Sroubek if he had been back to the Czech Republic until they were ordered to review the case.

This is despite Immigration Minister Iain Lees-Galloway's specific queries about Sroubek's travel history, and the importance of the information which, if true, would have undermined Sroubek's case for residency.

Immigration NZ general manager Stephen Dunstan justified the omission by saying that officials do not play an "investigative" role in the process.

Whether they should will form part of the review currently underway, he added.

On Friday it was revealed that an email from a Customs intelligence analyst in 2012 told Immigration NZ that Sroubek had flown into Frankfurt and driven to the Czech Republic in 2009 - but this information was somehow lost and not given to Lees-Galloway to inform his initial decision.

Lees-Galloway granted residency to Sroubek in September, but reviewed the case after it emerged that Sroubek may have travelled back to the Czech Republic, and following reports that his estranged wife no longer supported his residency bid.

After the review, Lees-Galloway issued a new deportation notice to Sroubek, who is appealing it.

The Minister said on Friday that if he had evidence that Sroubek had gone back, he would have "likely" decided to deport Sroubek from the outset.

But National Party immigration spokesman Michael Woodhouse said the minister was clutching at straws because, even disregarding whether Sroubek had been back, the case against him was so strong that the minister should have decided to deport him immediately.

Woodhouse added that the Minister should have just asked Sroubek the "obvious" question about whether he'd been back, if that information was so vital.

Lees-Galloway said that he did ask, but immigration officials told him the information could not be ascertained.

Immigration NZ's system did not show Sroubek's travel to the Czech Republic because it only records a person's flight into or out of New Zealand, but not the starting point or end destination.

Despite the minister's query, Dunstan confirmed that officials had not asked Sroubek if he had been back.

"The preparation of case files does not currently include an investigative role and therefore there was no requirement to put the question about his alleged travel to the Czech Republic to Mr Sroubek," Dunstan said.

"However, the question of whether Immigration NZ should take on an investigative role when preparing case files will be addressed as part of the current review being undertaken by Mike Heron QC."

Dunstan said the travel information in the 2012 email about Sroubek's travel history was unverified.

"As the original case file made clear, Mr Sroubek's immigration history is not clear cut and it appears he may have travelled in and out of New Zealand using more than one travel document.

"Immigration NZ were focused on information that was relevant to the grounds under which he was liable for deportation."

After Lees-Galloway ordered the review, however, officials asked Sroubek and he confirmed he had been to the Czech Republic twice in 2009 - under the name Jan Antolik.

Asked if officials had failed him in this case, Lees-Galloway said on Friday that he will await the findings of the review.

 

 

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