A Perth grandmother is pleading with Australian immigration officials to let her stay.
Linda Oppel spent most of her life in South Africa. Following her husbandโs death in 2011, she moved to Australia to be with her sister, Monica Overholzer.
Overholzer moved to Australia 13 years ago and became an Australian citizen. She is Oppelโs only remaining relative, but Australian law doesnโt recognise this for a strange reason.
When she was 12 years old, Oppel was adopted by an older half-sister.
The adoption process meant that, unfortunately, Oppel was no longer legally related to her biological parents or her sister.
This loophole also means that Oppel was not considered a viable candidate for a Remaining Relative Visa.
Now 58 years old, Oppel has lived in Australia for the last six years, even receiving a temporary 457 visa to work here.
Oppelโs entire family now resides in Australia, including her two adult children and an infant grandson.
โIโm really scared to go back,โ Oppel said of South Africa, which she deemed unsafe for women.
However, after her application for the Remaining Relative Visa was denied in May, Oppel was reluctantly making plans to return to her home country.
Thatโs when immigration minister Peter Dutton heard about the case thanks to an article in The Australian.
โThe lady involved wonโt be deported whilst Iโm looking at the matter,โ Dutton declared on a Perth radio station.
โWe are a compassionate country. We provide support to a lot of people and allow people to become Australian citizens or settle here permanently.โ
Oppelโs fate will remain in Duttonโs hands until the case is reviewed, but thereโs no word on how long this review will take and no guarantee of a positive result.
This article was first published on Starts at 60.