Hipkins responds to journalist MIQ saga as criticism mounts

Chris Hipkins. Photo: RNZ / Samuel Rillstone
Chris Hipkins. Photo: RNZ / Samuel Rillstone
Covid-19 Response Minister Chris Hipkins has defended how pregnant women are treated by the MIQ system, after Kiwi journalist Charlotte Bellis revealed she was stuck in Afghanistan after being denied an emergency allocation.

  • Bellis offered asylum

Hipkins says "there is a place in MIQ for people with special circumstances like Ms Bellis", with more options being provided to assist her with her emergency MIQ application.

However, only about 13 per cent of applications - 29 - involving pregnancies were approved since June last year, compared with about 60 per cent of emergency applications overall.

And a lawyer who has represented dozens of people in similar situations pro bono says rejections are often overturned only once legal and/or media pressure was applied, raising questions about how fair the process is.

Christchurch-born Bellis, in an open letter published in the Weekend Herald, revealed her battle to come home and give birth in her home country, and how she had to ask the Taliban to see if she could return to Afghanistan.

Since then there have been renewed calls to amend the managed isolation and quarantine emergency allocation criteria to specifically cater for pregnant women.

Hipkins today published a statement defending the Government's actions around Bellis and pregnant women being denied emergency allocations in general.

"I want to be clear, there is a place in MIQ for people with special circumstances like Ms Bellis. No one's saying there is not," Hipkins said.

"I understand she wanted to return on a specific date and that officials reached out to her for more information shortly after looking at her application.

Charlotte Bellis has been denied emergency allocation for MIQ and is stuck in Afghanistan. Photo:...
Charlotte Bellis has been denied emergency allocation for MIQ and is stuck in Afghanistan. Photo: Jim Huylebroek

"The emergency allocation criteria includes a requirement to travel to New Zealand within the next 14 days.

"Ms Bellis indicated she did not intend to travel until the end of February and has been encouraged by MIQ to consider moving her plans forward.

"I understand officials have also since invited her to apply for another emergency category. I encourage her to take these offers seriously.

"I also understand she was offered New Zealand consular assistance twice since she returned to Afghanistan in early December but has not responded. Again, I encourage her to take up any offers of assistance."

Bellis has previously stated she was consulting with her lawyers about applying under the new MIQ emergency allocation category she had been offered. Her primary concern is healthcare for herself and her baby after birth.

Last year Roshni Sami and barrister Tudor Clee started the Baby Bridge Initiative to help others to lobby the Government to do better by mothers-to-be. It has the support of National, Act and the Green Party.

Sami went to court after her husband, Walter, who was stranded in the United States, was denied an MIQ spot before their child's birth.

She gave birth on December 30 with Walter by her side.

Clee, who has represented dozens of people pro bono in similar circumstances, previously told the Herald that while the emergency criteria allowed for situations involving pregnancy, it was highly complicated and easy to get wrong.

Clee said rejections were often overturned once legal and/or media pressure was applied. Clee had written to the Government, urging it to amend the criteria.

Bellis alluded to this in her open letter also, saying that while her application was initially rejected it was "mysteriously" reopened, unsolicited, after she made an inquiry through a National Party MP and public relations expert.

"The decision of who should get an emergency MIQ spot is not made on a level playing field, lacks ethical reasoning and pits our most vulnerable against each other," she wrote.

National's immigration spokeswoman, Erica Stanford, said she wrote to Hipkins in October on behalf of the group, but to no avail.

"By Charlotte coming forward, it highlights what hundreds of women have faced over the last two years," Stanford said.

Head of MIQ Chris Bunny said it had looked into making changes to how applications involving pregnancy were considered, but decided instead to "include consideration of the unborn child when assessing and making decisions where pregnancy is part of the emergency application".

Hipkins said while MIQ had to make difficult choices, it had "served New Zealand exceptionally well, saved lives and hospital admissions and kept our health system from being swamped, unlike the situation in many other countries".

There would be changes at the border announced "soon", he said.

Hipkins said the emergency allocation criteria did cater for expectant mothers and/or those bringing their partner home to support them.

"This includes for medical treatment if a mother is overseas and cannot get the required treatment where they are, and allowing people to urgently return to New Zealand to provide critical care for a dependant, such as their spouse or partner who is pregnant."

However, figures released to the Herald show just over 10 per cent of such applications involving pregnancy are approved. This compares with about 60 per cent of emergency applications overall being approved.

From June 1 last year to today there were 219 emergency allocation applications which involved a pregnancy, with 29 approved. Of those, 65 were declined and seven were still in process (including that of Bellis).

There were 118 cancelled by the applicants or they were not processed due to being incomplete applications.

Meanwhile, From October 30, 2020, to January 23, 2022, MIQ processed 8863 completed emergency allocation applications and approved 5396.