I
think a very large number of
Australians would be extremely
indignant if the government
started making an exception in
my case and said all other
relatives and next-of-kin can
visit their daughters, but not
Mr Irving.
|
http://www.abc.net.au/news/2001/11/item20011102075145_1.htm
Friday, November 2 2001 10:09 AM
AEDT
TOP STORIES
Irving
launches another attempt for Australia
visa
CONTROVERSIAL British
historian David Irving has launched
his fifth attempt in nine years to gain an
Australian visa.
Mr Irving has been refused entry to
Australia four times since 1992 and
labelled anti-Semitic and extremist for
writings questioning the Holocaust.
However, he says he is confident this
attempt will be successful, because his
British-born daughter has taken out
Australian citizenship and as her close
relative, he should be allowed to visit
her.
"I'm
making yet another application, much more
confidently," Mr Irving told AAP.
"I've said to [Immigration Minister
Philip] Mr Ruddock (left) that
I don't intend to rely, at this stage, on
the fact that my daughter is an Australian
citizen.
"I want to emphasise that I haven't
ambushed the Australian government. I had
no idea my daughter had become an
Australian citizen. She turned up in
England on one of her regular visits and
she said, 'Oh, by the way Dad, I've become
an Australian'.
"Having produced her passport, quite
innocently she has smashed open the door
to Australia as far as I am concerned.
"I think a very large number of
Australians would be extremely indignant
if the government started making an
exception in my case and said all other
relatives and next-of-kin can visit their
daughters, but not Mr Irving."
© 2001
Australian Broadcasting Corporation
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