What a pity that in a week New Zealand and Australia are looking forward to a sporting clash of the highest order at the Rugby World Cup final, New Zealand is preparing to receive ex-prisoners deported from Australia who were born here but may have lost any connection with this
Editorial: Deportees have harmed Kiwi interests
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They will be angry at their fate and probably resentful that they are here only by accident of birth. Having been convicted of crimes carrying as little as a year's imprisonment, they have served their sentence, paying their dues as far as they are concerned to the country they consider their own. They find themselves instead in a place they left, probably as a child, long ago and may blame it for their misfortune.
While it is in our interests to provide all reasonable assistance to enable them to establish a new life here, we should not sympathise with their predicament too much. They need to be aware that every Australian Kiwi who breaks the laws of that country puts at risk the right of all New Zealanders to live and work across the Tasman.
It is a privilege open to no other nation and it is always at risk when it creates inconsistencies in Australia's immigration and welfare arrangements. Home-coming offenders have let us down and should not forget it.