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Hit-run death a symbol of migrant workers' sacrifices

Hit-run death a symbol of migrant workers' sacrifices

The Advertiser05-07-2025
Argen Kuni came to Australia with "a heart full of hope", determined to earn enough money to build a new home for his wife and two sons.
The young father arrived from the Solomon Islands under the Pacific Australia Labour Mobility, or PALM, scheme in July 2021 to work at a rural meat processing plant, assured of good conditions and a decent wage.
"For Argen, this opportunity was more than just employment," his brother Kenneth Kuni tells AAP.
"It was a chance to fulfil his dream of providing a better life for his family."
With visions of a promising new chapter, Mr Kuni instead found himself cleaning out the innards of hundreds of animals every day and returning to a small room shared with three other workers at night.
He confided that he felt betrayed and was concerned for his mental and physical health as the conditions took a toll.
Mr Kuni left the PALM scheme and was granted a different visa in 2022, going on to work in agriculture and construction. He finally earned enough to build his family home.
But just as he was planning to return to his homeland, the 34-year-old was struck and killed by a car in a suspected hit-and-run in the NSW Riverina city of Griffith on April 28.
His body was found just after 4am, the time he usually began walking to work at a local poultry farm.
"In a conversation shortly before his death, Argen expressed his satisfaction in achieving his goal of building a home for his family and his desire to return home to reunite with them," Kenneth Kuni says, over email.
"Unfortunately, he passed away before he could fulfil that promise."
Police say Mr Kuni was found on the roadside. He'd suffered multiple injuries and could not be revived by paramedics.
Investigators have appealed to find the drivers of a light-coloured ute and dark-coloured SUV seen in the area at the time.
Mr Kuni's death highlights the risks and vulnerabilities faced by migrant workers, particularly the estimated 4800 people who absconded from the PALM scheme across Australia in the five years to mid-2023.
A NSW parliamentary inquiry examining the risks of modern slavery in rural areas has revealed mistreatment of PALM workers, who come from the Pacific to fill critical gaps in agriculture, horticulture, meat processing and aged care.
Unlike other temporary migrant workers, PALM participants cannot readily change employers under their visa conditions.
This immobility creates a dangerous power imbalance for workers, Immigration Advice and Rights Centre chief executive Joshua Strutt says.
Unscrupulous labour hire companies or employers take advantage of the restricted movement condition, with many instances of workers doing unpaid labour, having their passports confiscated or being critically injured in unsafe workplaces.
With no clear path for recourse, some feel they have no choice but to disengage from the scheme.
"They're scared for their lives, they're scared for their livelihoods," Mr Strutt, the legal centre's principal solicitor, tells AAP.
"They've come here to earn money for themselves and for their families back home and be treated with dignity and respect.
"They're not getting that treatment here in Australia."
Once PALM workers leave the scheme, they lose access to health insurance, accommodation and legal employment, only increasing their vulnerability and risk of exploitation.
The community of Griffith, where Mr Kuni spent his final months, has become a destination for adrift PALM participants hoping to find work in the expansive cropping and horticulture region.
Social services in the NSW town have been inundated with disengaged workers in need of support, particularly women seeking reproductive healthcare or accommodation after fleeing violent co-workers and employers.
A report by the state's anti-slavery commissioner says there are also early warning signs of small-scale organised labour trafficking in the Riverina due to the pool of undocumented and desperate workers.
"It's often local communities that have to step in and help people in this precarious situation," commissioner James Cockayne told the inquiry in April.
"It's local service providers that are dealing with the consequences of systems failure in our management of these temporary work schemes."
The inquiry has acknowledged many PALM workers flourish in Australia, with a 2022 survey showing 98 per cent would recommend the scheme to others and 92 per cent intended participating again.
The federal government has moved to strengthen the scheme in recent years, introducing protections such as minimum hours requirements, better transparency around accommodation costs and pay parity with domestic workers.
It has also formed a task force to better prevent and respond to worker disengagement, while language, literacy and digital training has been offered to participants under a new program.
Employment and Workplace Relations Minister Amanda Rishworth says grievance mechanisms are available when there are allegations of worker exploitation.
"My heart goes out to Mr Kuni's loved ones at this difficult time," she says.
"The death of any PALM scheme worker is a tragedy."
While the government's changes have been welcomed, legal and social advocates say the restrictive PALM visa conditions remain one of the biggest threats to workers' wellbeing.
A more complex overarching issue is the way some Australians think about migrant workers, Mr Strutt says.
"We've heard reports of PALM workers and other temporary migrants being referred to as imports or goods, not as human beings.
"These are people who come to Australia to pick our fruit, butcher meat that ends up in our supermarkets and ... look after our loved ones.
"They just don't deserve to be treated as sub-human."
Kenneth Kuni wants to see greater mobility for PALM workers.
He hopes his brother's short life inspires change.
"His story serves as a poignant reminder of the sacrifices made by individuals seeking better opportunities abroad and the importance of ensuring fair treatment and support for all workers."
Reports of modern slavery can be made to 1800 FREEDOM (1800 37 333 66)
Argen Kuni came to Australia with "a heart full of hope", determined to earn enough money to build a new home for his wife and two sons.
The young father arrived from the Solomon Islands under the Pacific Australia Labour Mobility, or PALM, scheme in July 2021 to work at a rural meat processing plant, assured of good conditions and a decent wage.
"For Argen, this opportunity was more than just employment," his brother Kenneth Kuni tells AAP.
"It was a chance to fulfil his dream of providing a better life for his family."
With visions of a promising new chapter, Mr Kuni instead found himself cleaning out the innards of hundreds of animals every day and returning to a small room shared with three other workers at night.
He confided that he felt betrayed and was concerned for his mental and physical health as the conditions took a toll.
Mr Kuni left the PALM scheme and was granted a different visa in 2022, going on to work in agriculture and construction. He finally earned enough to build his family home.
But just as he was planning to return to his homeland, the 34-year-old was struck and killed by a car in a suspected hit-and-run in the NSW Riverina city of Griffith on April 28.
His body was found just after 4am, the time he usually began walking to work at a local poultry farm.
"In a conversation shortly before his death, Argen expressed his satisfaction in achieving his goal of building a home for his family and his desire to return home to reunite with them," Kenneth Kuni says, over email.
"Unfortunately, he passed away before he could fulfil that promise."
Police say Mr Kuni was found on the roadside. He'd suffered multiple injuries and could not be revived by paramedics.
Investigators have appealed to find the drivers of a light-coloured ute and dark-coloured SUV seen in the area at the time.
Mr Kuni's death highlights the risks and vulnerabilities faced by migrant workers, particularly the estimated 4800 people who absconded from the PALM scheme across Australia in the five years to mid-2023.
A NSW parliamentary inquiry examining the risks of modern slavery in rural areas has revealed mistreatment of PALM workers, who come from the Pacific to fill critical gaps in agriculture, horticulture, meat processing and aged care.
Unlike other temporary migrant workers, PALM participants cannot readily change employers under their visa conditions.
This immobility creates a dangerous power imbalance for workers, Immigration Advice and Rights Centre chief executive Joshua Strutt says.
Unscrupulous labour hire companies or employers take advantage of the restricted movement condition, with many instances of workers doing unpaid labour, having their passports confiscated or being critically injured in unsafe workplaces.
With no clear path for recourse, some feel they have no choice but to disengage from the scheme.
"They're scared for their lives, they're scared for their livelihoods," Mr Strutt, the legal centre's principal solicitor, tells AAP.
"They've come here to earn money for themselves and for their families back home and be treated with dignity and respect.
"They're not getting that treatment here in Australia."
Once PALM workers leave the scheme, they lose access to health insurance, accommodation and legal employment, only increasing their vulnerability and risk of exploitation.
The community of Griffith, where Mr Kuni spent his final months, has become a destination for adrift PALM participants hoping to find work in the expansive cropping and horticulture region.
Social services in the NSW town have been inundated with disengaged workers in need of support, particularly women seeking reproductive healthcare or accommodation after fleeing violent co-workers and employers.
A report by the state's anti-slavery commissioner says there are also early warning signs of small-scale organised labour trafficking in the Riverina due to the pool of undocumented and desperate workers.
"It's often local communities that have to step in and help people in this precarious situation," commissioner James Cockayne told the inquiry in April.
"It's local service providers that are dealing with the consequences of systems failure in our management of these temporary work schemes."
The inquiry has acknowledged many PALM workers flourish in Australia, with a 2022 survey showing 98 per cent would recommend the scheme to others and 92 per cent intended participating again.
The federal government has moved to strengthen the scheme in recent years, introducing protections such as minimum hours requirements, better transparency around accommodation costs and pay parity with domestic workers.
It has also formed a task force to better prevent and respond to worker disengagement, while language, literacy and digital training has been offered to participants under a new program.
Employment and Workplace Relations Minister Amanda Rishworth says grievance mechanisms are available when there are allegations of worker exploitation.
"My heart goes out to Mr Kuni's loved ones at this difficult time," she says.
"The death of any PALM scheme worker is a tragedy."
While the government's changes have been welcomed, legal and social advocates say the restrictive PALM visa conditions remain one of the biggest threats to workers' wellbeing.
A more complex overarching issue is the way some Australians think about migrant workers, Mr Strutt says.
"We've heard reports of PALM workers and other temporary migrants being referred to as imports or goods, not as human beings.
"These are people who come to Australia to pick our fruit, butcher meat that ends up in our supermarkets and ... look after our loved ones.
"They just don't deserve to be treated as sub-human."
Kenneth Kuni wants to see greater mobility for PALM workers.
He hopes his brother's short life inspires change.
"His story serves as a poignant reminder of the sacrifices made by individuals seeking better opportunities abroad and the importance of ensuring fair treatment and support for all workers."
Reports of modern slavery can be made to 1800 FREEDOM (1800 37 333 66)
Argen Kuni came to Australia with "a heart full of hope", determined to earn enough money to build a new home for his wife and two sons.
The young father arrived from the Solomon Islands under the Pacific Australia Labour Mobility, or PALM, scheme in July 2021 to work at a rural meat processing plant, assured of good conditions and a decent wage.
"For Argen, this opportunity was more than just employment," his brother Kenneth Kuni tells AAP.
"It was a chance to fulfil his dream of providing a better life for his family."
With visions of a promising new chapter, Mr Kuni instead found himself cleaning out the innards of hundreds of animals every day and returning to a small room shared with three other workers at night.
He confided that he felt betrayed and was concerned for his mental and physical health as the conditions took a toll.
Mr Kuni left the PALM scheme and was granted a different visa in 2022, going on to work in agriculture and construction. He finally earned enough to build his family home.
But just as he was planning to return to his homeland, the 34-year-old was struck and killed by a car in a suspected hit-and-run in the NSW Riverina city of Griffith on April 28.
His body was found just after 4am, the time he usually began walking to work at a local poultry farm.
"In a conversation shortly before his death, Argen expressed his satisfaction in achieving his goal of building a home for his family and his desire to return home to reunite with them," Kenneth Kuni says, over email.
"Unfortunately, he passed away before he could fulfil that promise."
Police say Mr Kuni was found on the roadside. He'd suffered multiple injuries and could not be revived by paramedics.
Investigators have appealed to find the drivers of a light-coloured ute and dark-coloured SUV seen in the area at the time.
Mr Kuni's death highlights the risks and vulnerabilities faced by migrant workers, particularly the estimated 4800 people who absconded from the PALM scheme across Australia in the five years to mid-2023.
A NSW parliamentary inquiry examining the risks of modern slavery in rural areas has revealed mistreatment of PALM workers, who come from the Pacific to fill critical gaps in agriculture, horticulture, meat processing and aged care.
Unlike other temporary migrant workers, PALM participants cannot readily change employers under their visa conditions.
This immobility creates a dangerous power imbalance for workers, Immigration Advice and Rights Centre chief executive Joshua Strutt says.
Unscrupulous labour hire companies or employers take advantage of the restricted movement condition, with many instances of workers doing unpaid labour, having their passports confiscated or being critically injured in unsafe workplaces.
With no clear path for recourse, some feel they have no choice but to disengage from the scheme.
"They're scared for their lives, they're scared for their livelihoods," Mr Strutt, the legal centre's principal solicitor, tells AAP.
"They've come here to earn money for themselves and for their families back home and be treated with dignity and respect.
"They're not getting that treatment here in Australia."
Once PALM workers leave the scheme, they lose access to health insurance, accommodation and legal employment, only increasing their vulnerability and risk of exploitation.
The community of Griffith, where Mr Kuni spent his final months, has become a destination for adrift PALM participants hoping to find work in the expansive cropping and horticulture region.
Social services in the NSW town have been inundated with disengaged workers in need of support, particularly women seeking reproductive healthcare or accommodation after fleeing violent co-workers and employers.
A report by the state's anti-slavery commissioner says there are also early warning signs of small-scale organised labour trafficking in the Riverina due to the pool of undocumented and desperate workers.
"It's often local communities that have to step in and help people in this precarious situation," commissioner James Cockayne told the inquiry in April.
"It's local service providers that are dealing with the consequences of systems failure in our management of these temporary work schemes."
The inquiry has acknowledged many PALM workers flourish in Australia, with a 2022 survey showing 98 per cent would recommend the scheme to others and 92 per cent intended participating again.
The federal government has moved to strengthen the scheme in recent years, introducing protections such as minimum hours requirements, better transparency around accommodation costs and pay parity with domestic workers.
It has also formed a task force to better prevent and respond to worker disengagement, while language, literacy and digital training has been offered to participants under a new program.
Employment and Workplace Relations Minister Amanda Rishworth says grievance mechanisms are available when there are allegations of worker exploitation.
"My heart goes out to Mr Kuni's loved ones at this difficult time," she says.
"The death of any PALM scheme worker is a tragedy."
While the government's changes have been welcomed, legal and social advocates say the restrictive PALM visa conditions remain one of the biggest threats to workers' wellbeing.
A more complex overarching issue is the way some Australians think about migrant workers, Mr Strutt says.
"We've heard reports of PALM workers and other temporary migrants being referred to as imports or goods, not as human beings.
"These are people who come to Australia to pick our fruit, butcher meat that ends up in our supermarkets and ... look after our loved ones.
"They just don't deserve to be treated as sub-human."
Kenneth Kuni wants to see greater mobility for PALM workers.
He hopes his brother's short life inspires change.
"His story serves as a poignant reminder of the sacrifices made by individuals seeking better opportunities abroad and the importance of ensuring fair treatment and support for all workers."
Reports of modern slavery can be made to 1800 FREEDOM (1800 37 333 66)
Argen Kuni came to Australia with "a heart full of hope", determined to earn enough money to build a new home for his wife and two sons.
The young father arrived from the Solomon Islands under the Pacific Australia Labour Mobility, or PALM, scheme in July 2021 to work at a rural meat processing plant, assured of good conditions and a decent wage.
"For Argen, this opportunity was more than just employment," his brother Kenneth Kuni tells AAP.
"It was a chance to fulfil his dream of providing a better life for his family."
With visions of a promising new chapter, Mr Kuni instead found himself cleaning out the innards of hundreds of animals every day and returning to a small room shared with three other workers at night.
He confided that he felt betrayed and was concerned for his mental and physical health as the conditions took a toll.
Mr Kuni left the PALM scheme and was granted a different visa in 2022, going on to work in agriculture and construction. He finally earned enough to build his family home.
But just as he was planning to return to his homeland, the 34-year-old was struck and killed by a car in a suspected hit-and-run in the NSW Riverina city of Griffith on April 28.
His body was found just after 4am, the time he usually began walking to work at a local poultry farm.
"In a conversation shortly before his death, Argen expressed his satisfaction in achieving his goal of building a home for his family and his desire to return home to reunite with them," Kenneth Kuni says, over email.
"Unfortunately, he passed away before he could fulfil that promise."
Police say Mr Kuni was found on the roadside. He'd suffered multiple injuries and could not be revived by paramedics.
Investigators have appealed to find the drivers of a light-coloured ute and dark-coloured SUV seen in the area at the time.
Mr Kuni's death highlights the risks and vulnerabilities faced by migrant workers, particularly the estimated 4800 people who absconded from the PALM scheme across Australia in the five years to mid-2023.
A NSW parliamentary inquiry examining the risks of modern slavery in rural areas has revealed mistreatment of PALM workers, who come from the Pacific to fill critical gaps in agriculture, horticulture, meat processing and aged care.
Unlike other temporary migrant workers, PALM participants cannot readily change employers under their visa conditions.
This immobility creates a dangerous power imbalance for workers, Immigration Advice and Rights Centre chief executive Joshua Strutt says.
Unscrupulous labour hire companies or employers take advantage of the restricted movement condition, with many instances of workers doing unpaid labour, having their passports confiscated or being critically injured in unsafe workplaces.
With no clear path for recourse, some feel they have no choice but to disengage from the scheme.
"They're scared for their lives, they're scared for their livelihoods," Mr Strutt, the legal centre's principal solicitor, tells AAP.
"They've come here to earn money for themselves and for their families back home and be treated with dignity and respect.
"They're not getting that treatment here in Australia."
Once PALM workers leave the scheme, they lose access to health insurance, accommodation and legal employment, only increasing their vulnerability and risk of exploitation.
The community of Griffith, where Mr Kuni spent his final months, has become a destination for adrift PALM participants hoping to find work in the expansive cropping and horticulture region.
Social services in the NSW town have been inundated with disengaged workers in need of support, particularly women seeking reproductive healthcare or accommodation after fleeing violent co-workers and employers.
A report by the state's anti-slavery commissioner says there are also early warning signs of small-scale organised labour trafficking in the Riverina due to the pool of undocumented and desperate workers.
"It's often local communities that have to step in and help people in this precarious situation," commissioner James Cockayne told the inquiry in April.
"It's local service providers that are dealing with the consequences of systems failure in our management of these temporary work schemes."
The inquiry has acknowledged many PALM workers flourish in Australia, with a 2022 survey showing 98 per cent would recommend the scheme to others and 92 per cent intended participating again.
The federal government has moved to strengthen the scheme in recent years, introducing protections such as minimum hours requirements, better transparency around accommodation costs and pay parity with domestic workers.
It has also formed a task force to better prevent and respond to worker disengagement, while language, literacy and digital training has been offered to participants under a new program.
Employment and Workplace Relations Minister Amanda Rishworth says grievance mechanisms are available when there are allegations of worker exploitation.
"My heart goes out to Mr Kuni's loved ones at this difficult time," she says.
"The death of any PALM scheme worker is a tragedy."
While the government's changes have been welcomed, legal and social advocates say the restrictive PALM visa conditions remain one of the biggest threats to workers' wellbeing.
A more complex overarching issue is the way some Australians think about migrant workers, Mr Strutt says.
"We've heard reports of PALM workers and other temporary migrants being referred to as imports or goods, not as human beings.
"These are people who come to Australia to pick our fruit, butcher meat that ends up in our supermarkets and ... look after our loved ones.
"They just don't deserve to be treated as sub-human."
Kenneth Kuni wants to see greater mobility for PALM workers.
He hopes his brother's short life inspires change.
"His story serves as a poignant reminder of the sacrifices made by individuals seeking better opportunities abroad and the importance of ensuring fair treatment and support for all workers."
Reports of modern slavery can be made to 1800 FREEDOM (1800 37 333 66)
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Wrongly convicted Folbigg 'failed again' by $2m offer
Wrongly convicted Folbigg 'failed again' by $2m offer

Canberra Times

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Wrongly convicted Folbigg to get undisclosed payout
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A woman who spent two decades in prison after being wrongfully convicted of killing her children will receive a compensation payment from the state government. Kathleen Folbigg was jailed over the deaths of her four children before being freed in June 2023 after new scientific evidence cast reasonable doubt over her convictions. On Thursday, NSW Attorney-General Michael Daley confirmed the government would make an ex gratia payment to the 57-year-old. Ms Folbigg requested the details of the payment, including the amount, not be publicly shared, government officials said. "The decision follows thorough and extensive consideration of the materials and issues raised in Ms Folbigg's application and provided by her legal representatives," Mr Daley said. "The decision has been communicated to Ms Folbigg via her legal representatives." The claim was made more than a year ago. Unlike court-run compensation claims with a series of precedents, ex gratia payments are one-off matters and are expected to be a decision of state cabinet. Ms Folbigg joins Lindy Chamberlain as rare Australians long jailed but later acquitted and then compensated. Ms Chamberlain and her former husband Michael were awarded an ex gratia payment of $1.3 million in 1992 for their prosecution in the Northern Territory over the death of baby daughter Azaria. West Australian man Scott Austic in May received $1.3 million on top of an earlier payment of $250,000 after serving nearly 13 years for murdering his pregnant secret lover. He'd sought $8.5 million after being acquitted in 2020 on appeal. Both payments were ex gratia, unlike David Eastman who was awarded $7 million in damages by the ACT Supreme Court in 2019. Ms Folbigg was convicted of three counts of murder and one count of manslaughter following the deaths of her children between 1989 and 1999. She successfully appealed against her convictions after scientific discoveries in genetics and cardiology cast doubt on her guilt following two inquiries into her verdicts. In 2024, Folbigg's lawyer Rhanee Rego told AAP the compensation claim included a lengthy statement explaining her 24-year experience with the matter, submissions detailing errors by agents of government and an expert report assessing loss suffered by the former prisoner. Ms Folbigg had previously sought a meeting with Premier Chris Minns, but he refused on the grounds she was in the middle of negotiations with the attorney-general.

Phone taps to be aired in Outback Wrangler star's trial
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Perth Now

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Phone taps to be aired in Outback Wrangler star's trial

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'What the evidence I think will reveal though, is that at the crash site, Mr Wright, [pilot Michael] Burbidge and [egg collector Jock] Purcell approached the crashed helicopter. 'They go into the helicopter and they remove some items, but that they — these are my words — play around with the dash.' The crown claims Mr Wright was trying to check whether the Hobbs meter was connected. 'He was concerned that the Hobbs metre was disconnected and that would be revealed by people turning up at the crash,' Mr Gullaci said. 'From the outset he attempts to cover up previous rule-breaking.' In a statutory declaration, Mr Wright told police he had seen about half a tank of fuel in the destroyed chopper when he arrived at the crash site. Mr Gullaci says listening devices later recorded Mr Wright admitting 'I didn't see f***in' any fuel in the tank, zero'. 'F*** mate, I don't know, but there was f***ing zero there,' he was allegedly recorded saying. 'It just had no fuel, he had run out of fuel, I'll just say he was a s**t pilot.' Mr Gullaci said Mr Wright made the statutory declaration with intent to obstruct investigations and avoid suggestions the aircraft operated without adequate fuel or that there was a fuel line problem. Mr Gullaci told the jury that none of Mr Wright's charges related to the cause of the helicopter crash itself but that 'the focus of the prosecution case is on what Mr Wright did after the crash happened'. The crown case is that Mr Wright did not properly record VH-IDW's flying hours and tried to cover that up because he feared that crash investigations would uncover that and it would result in charges against him and his companies. Mr Gullaci says Mr Wright's alleged offending was motivated by fear that 'he could be blamed for the crash'. 'That one of his helicopters has crashed and his very, very close mate Christopher Wilson has been killed and another close friend has been seriously injured, then of course there's going to be scrutiny,' he said. 'If it's uncovered that there's systemic under-recording of hours, then that could be used as a way to blame him for the accident.' The prosecution alleged the crashed helicopter had flown for more hours than was reflected on its Hobbs meter. The court heard that investigators had concluded the destroyed chopper was likely over its 2200 hours. 'If it had exceeded that threshold, the rules are, it shouldn't have been flying,' Mr Gullaci said. The crown will continue its opening address on Thursday morning before Mr Burns is called to give evidence. - With AAP

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