Refugee Convention criteria
Well-founded fear of persecution for reasons of race, religion, nationality, political opinion, or membership of a particular social group. Cannot rely on home country protection.
Applicants found to be refugees under the Refugee Convention, or who meet complementary protection criteria, can be granted the 866. It is a permanent visa with a direct pathway to citizenship. The evidence standard is specific and the process is rigorous.
Protection visa assessment covers two legal frameworks.
Well-founded fear of persecution for reasons of race, religion, nationality, political opinion, or membership of a particular social group. Cannot rely on home country protection.
Real risk of significant harm (death penalty, torture, cruel treatment, degrading treatment) on return. Broader than Refugee Convention.
Identity must be credibly established. Documentary and country of origin evidence.
Section 501 character applies. Most criminal records can affect protection outcomes.
The protection visa process is structured and evidence-intensive.
Protection visa applications face specific evidentiary challenges.
Department relies on DFAT and other country of origin information. Applicant evidence must engage with the specific country context.
Consistent accounts across interview and written statement. Minor inconsistencies can affect outcomes.
Department sometimes argues applicant could safely relocate within home country. Evidence of national-scale risk important.
Applicants with legal representation in protection matters typically have significantly better outcomes than self-represented applicants. The legal tests are technical; country information and credibility are nuanced. Our immigration lawyer Prateek Maan handles protection matters including judicial review.
For protection visa applications and appeals, book with Prateek Maan.