New Zealand-born teen facing deportation to India appeals to authorities to stay - Kumar gets redeemed.

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  • Daman Kumar, 18, faces deportation to India despite being born in New Zealand.
  • His lawyer, Alastair McClymont, calls the decision a “disgrace” and urges compassion from immigration officials.
  • The Green Party’s Ricardo Menéndez March is advocating for Kumar to be granted a residency visa.
An 18-year-old born in New Zealand has been told to leave or face deportation to India – a country he’s never been to – in a case his lawyer calls a “disgrace” of a magnitude he hasn’t witnessed in 28 years of practice.

Daman Kumar has been told to leave the country by Monday or he’ll be issued with a deportation order.

That’s despite his 22-year-old sister Radhika Kumar being allowed to stay here lawfully because she was born before changes to the Citizenship Act in 2006.

The siblings’ parents have lived here around 24 years as overstayers. They have also been threatened with deportation.

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Daman Kumar (18, right) and his 22-year-old sister Radhika (left) were both born in New Zealand. Daman is being threatened with deportation.
Daman Kumar told the Herald he wants immigration officials to allow him to remain in New Zealand – a country he calls home – so he can start university and continue to contribute to society.

“This is my home and my country. I feel a very deep connection to this country as I’ve been here my whole life and all I ask is that I’m given a chance,” he told the Herald.

Kumar said he’d have no idea how to find a job in India given a lack of connections there and inability to read and write Punjabi.

“If I go to India, they’re just setting me up for failure.”

He hasn’t spoken publicly about his plight before and never mentioned his background to friends because he wanted to be treated as an equal among his peers while going through school.

“I never told anyone, but they’ve treated me as a normal person, as a normal human being in this country, as a Kiwi.”

His sister, Radhika, said the situation threatens to “rip the family apart”.

“I find that quite unfair because our whole life we’ve grown up together. I believe that the minister should definitely give my parents and my brother a chance, especially my brother, since it’s definitely not his fault,” she said.

She said the family have tried to appeal to authorities by sending a “special direction” request to Associate Immigration Minister Chris Penk, which was turned down by his officials.

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Lawyer Alastair McClymont is appealing for immigration officials to reverse its decision to deport his client Daman Kumar to India – a country he's never visited.
Lawyer Alastair McClymont, who’s working pro bono for the family, said Daman is blameless but is now faced with being labelled a criminal.

“I think every single Kiwi in this country would be absolutely horrified that this sort of thing is happening,” he said.

He said in other similar cases he’s come across, government officials have shown sympathy.

He likened the situation to US President Donald Trump’s hardline policy targeting immigrants.

“Now we have the actual Minister of Immigration saying, no, we’re going to deport him to a foreign country. I’ve never come across that before in 28 years, and I’m really worried about the way that the system is now working when we see what’s happening in the United States.”

McClymont called the situation an “absolute disgrace” and felt any compassion within the immigration system appeared to have been lost.

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Associate Immigration Minister Chris Penk.
An Immigration NZ (INZ) document seen by the Herald declined a request for ministerial intervention.

“They are in New Zealand unlawfully and must depart at the earliest opportunity,” an INZ decision-maker said.

A spokeswoman for Associate Immigration Minister Chris Penk told the Herald the matter was “operational”.

INZ’s general manager of investigations and compliance, Steve Watson, acknowledged the difficult situation Daman, his sister and his mother, Sunita Devi, were faced with.

He said children born in New Zealand after January 1, 2006 automatically hold the most favourable visa status of their parents.

“Because Devi was unlawfully in New Zealand at the time of Daman’s birth, he therefore inherits her immigration status as being unlawfully in New Zealand,” he said.

He said INZ had already extended the deadline for the family to leave twice.

Daman Kumar is still hoping an avenue will be made available for him and his family to stay in New Zealand, where he has aspirations of starting university to study webpage design and information technology.

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Green Party immigration spokesman Ricardo Menéndez March said New Zealand is “all Daman knows” and he has no connection to India.

He told the Herald he’s writing to Minister Penk to ask him to intervene and reconsider the case.

“The minister here has an opportunity to do the right thing and grant a residency class visa [to Daman] alongside his family so that they can stay in the country that they belong to,” he said.
 
He said children born in New Zealand after January 1, 2006 automatically hold the most favourable visa status of their parents.

“Because Devi was unlawfully in New Zealand at the time of Daman’s birth, he therefore inherits her immigration status as being unlawfully in New Zealand,” he said.
There's no mention of the father. Possible anchor baby? The sister mentions parents however, implying the father's legal.
 
There's no mention of the father. Possible anchor baby? The sister mentions parents however, implying the father's legal.
He said children born in New Zealand after January 1, 2006 automatically hold the most favourable visa status of their parents.

“Because Devi was unlawfully in New Zealand at the time of Daman’s birth, he therefore inherits her immigration status as being unlawfully in New Zealand,” he said.
More than likely he was supposed to. His sister was born before they closed that loophole so she's automatically legal, but he wasn't and that's why they're kicking him out.

All the same, sucks to be him. It's not like he chose to be born Indian (and in a country illegally), and now they're kicking him out of the only life he's ever known. Can't imagine a worser fate than having to go to India, for anybody. Might as well just kill himself then and there. Or go to Canada, or the UK or something, and claim he's fleeing political persecution. I'm sure they won't mind another pajeet in their midst.

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He hasn’t spoken publicly about his plight before and never mentioned his background to friends because he wanted to be treated as an equal among his peers while going through school.

“I never told anyone, but they’ve treated me as a normal person, as a normal human being in this country, as a Kiwi.”
Sounds like they knew about it for a while, then why didn't they do anything about it in the years since? And now they have to deal with it at the worst possible time for everybody involved.
 
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I did a quick dig and this article mentions the father, so I'm not sure... Maybe he quietly sorted out his own visa and is just having the family deported? Fucking Chad move.

Wittle baby can’t speak or write jeet, so he can’t go home? Well lucky for him, he’s got two parents who can teach him when they all go back.
English is an official language (along with Hindi and 100+ other poo languages) so he'd be rocking up with a God-tier education. Unlike staying here, where he's just another 'jeet.
 
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Said article (A)

The Kiwi kid who faces being deported to a country he’s never been to​

He was born here. He's never left the country. So why is Daman Kumar facing deportation to somewhere he knows nobody and doesn't speak the language? Steve Kilgallon reports.

Daman Kumar is a Kiwi kid. He was born in Auckland, and he’s never left the country. He’s just finished school, and he wants to go to university to study visual arts.

But if he doesn’t leave the country on Monday, he faces deportation.

Daman was born in June 2006 - just eight weeks after a law change which removed automatic citizenship from all babies born on New Zealand soil. So because his parents were overstayers, he immediately became one too - which means he’s never been here legally.
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The issue came to a head when his family wanted to try and legitimise his status before Daman turned 18 earlier this year so he could, among other things, study at university.

Now attempts to stop Daman being removed to India, a country he’s never been to, has very few family links and where he doesn’t speak any of the major languages, have been rebuffed by Immigration NZ and the Associate Immigration Minister, Chris Penk.

Penk has refused to use his ministerial discretion to grant Daman and his parents residence visas. Instead, they have been issued Deportation Liability Notices, giving them until February 17 to leave the country voluntarily or face formal removal.

It wasn’t until Daman was in intermediate school that he realised he was not like all the other kids.

“It was at first hard to find the difference, then it became increasingly apparent - it stuck out like a sore thumb, and you see people do stuff you can’t do, but there’s nothing you can say because you’ve got to keep it a secret,” he says. “I’ve never really told anyone.”
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Because Daman has no valid visa, he cannot have a drivers licence or bank account or register with a GP, cannot go overseas and cannot easily access tertiary education. Since finishing high school, he says he has mainly stayed at home and felt excluded from society as his friends start university. “I’ve lived a lie,” he says. “I want to be treated normally.”

But life is very different for his sister, Radhika. She was born in 2002 - before the law change, so has citizenship. She’s just graduated from AUT with a degree in criminology.

She says it has been tough growing up and seeing her brother denied everything she has. “I feel a kind of guilt that I am a citizen and he’s not. I feel sad he doesn’t get privileges, knowing it is not his fault and he doesn’t get a say in it. In my eyes, he’s no different to me, he has grown up the same.”

Daman’s father Naresh Kumar came here in March 2001 on a work visa and was joined by his wife, Sunita Devi, in September that year. Immigration NZ says she last held a valid visa in 2004. They only realised Daman was also classified as an overstayer when they registered his birth.

Devi says she worked as a farm labourer, often for cash, but for the past three years paying taxes, but somehow never came to the attention of Immigration New Zealand until recently. “Lucky - I feel God is always with us,” she says.


Anu Kaloti, president of the Migrant Workers Association, began working with the family three years ago trying to find a legal way for them to stay in the country. Devi previously asked for ministerial intervention in 2010, and had applications for a work permit declined in 2011.

In April last year, Immigration NZ declined a further request to give them visas. In May, Kaloti applied to Penk to intervene. In December, he declined to do so. Kaloti was then told by Immigration NZ’s Compliance division the family had to leave by January 31, a deadline later extended to this coming Monday.
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Kaloti says the family came from the lowly Dalit caste and will face prejudice in India, and have very few relations there as most have emigrated. “Daman has absolutely no experience of that country, he doesn’t understand the culture, he doesn’t know the language,” she says. “It would be so cruel.”

On Friday, the Green immigration spokesman Ricardo Menendez-March made an urgent request to Penk to reconsider his decision.

“New Zealand is all Daman knows. This is a clear example of someone whose connections lie here in this country, and this country alone, and sending him and his family overseas would completely rip him apart from the country he belongs to,” Menendez March says.

“The minister has an opportunity to do the right thing and let Daman and his family stay ... and send a message to many other underage people who do not know life in any other country, but the one in which they belong.”

Veteran immigration lawyer Alastair McClymont is acting for the family and believes that the request for visas for them would usually be granted.

“In 28 years of doing these applications, this is the very first time I’ve seen such an application turned down, and an expectation someone be deported when they’ve done absolutely nothing wrong … he’s spent his whole life thinking he’s like any other kid ... [but] he’s being treated as a common criminal and threatened with being put on a plane and deported to a foreign country.”

McClymont says the decision implies a hardening of attitudes towards immigrants. “What we see in America at the moment is undocumented migrants now being branded as criminals and Chris Penk seems to be taking this one step forward and saying this kid is a criminal and deserves to be deported... It’s really worrying and if this is going to be a trend, it should be a real concern to all New Zealanders."
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Penk’s office told Stuff the minister had declined to intervene in the case, the matter now lay with INZ, and he had no further comment to add.

In a statement, Steve Watson, INZ General Manager – Immigration Investigations and Compliance, said: “We appreciate that this is a difficult situation for Daman Kumar and his mother, Sunita Devi.”

Watson said INZ had twice extended a deadline for the family to leave, “in order for the family to exhaust all avenues and options”.

“We understand that this is a disappointing outcome, particularly for Daman. However, as they are in New Zealand unlawfully, if they do not depart New Zealand by Monday 17 February 2025 they will be served with a deportation order.”
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Now Daman faces a deeply uncertain future. He speaks only basic Punjabi, has met his maternal grandparents only once, and says he has no idea what he would do in India: “I don’t know what is going to happen, but I really can’t do anything.”
- Stuff
 
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God, I fucking hate New Zealand so much. They get to pretend like they’re the most progressive faggots and brow beat the world., but when it comes to their borders, all of a sudden they grow a backbone.

I remember when they were smugly chuckling at everyone having Covid and they reopened after lockdowns first. quietly not mentioning that they shut down their borders for the longest time out of any western nation.
 
He said INZ had already extended the deadline for the family to leave twice.

Daman Kumar is still hoping an avenue will be made available for him and his family to stay in New Zealand
So it's not just him but the whole family that's illegal.
Way to bury the lede
where he has aspirations of starting university to study webpage design and information technology.
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