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AAP
AAP
Politics
Tracey Ferrier

Get me out of here, Tamil dad begs

Lawyer Carina Ford says the Murugappans will still be subject to restrictions while living in Perth. (AAP)

A Tamil father has begged to get off Christmas Island as soon as possible but his lawyer says his family faces ongoing oppression even after they are reunited in Perth.

Immigration Minister Alex Hawke has decided to allow the Murugappan family to live in the community in Perth, after years in immigration detention, most recently on Christmas Island.

But he has warned there's no guaranteed pathway to a visa that would allow the family to permanently return to their home in the Queensland town of Biloela.

Nades Murugappan and his oldest daughter Kopika are waiting for a plane to fly them from Christmas Island to Perth to reunite with his wife Priya and their youngest child, Tharnicaa, who remains ill in hospital.

Immigration lawyer Carina Ford says Nades and his family are desperate for some sense of freedom, but have also warned they'll be subject to a long list of restrictions about what they can and cannot do while living in the community.

She's told of Mr Murugappan's emotional response to news his family will soon be reunited, albeit without the right to remain in Australia.

"Just get me out of here, I just want to get out of Christmas Island," he told Ms Ford during a call on Tuesday morning.

Ms Ford said the minister did not have to wait for ongoing legal cases to conclude to intervene and grant an exemption to allow the family to stay.

"The minister can use his power at any time," she told reporters in Melbourne.

Ms Ford said she'd sent medical records to Mr Hawke so he could see for himself that the family's detention had caused significant mental health issues.

Lawyer Carina Ford says the Murugappans will still be subject to restrictions while living in Perth. (AAP)

She said the family was happy they would regain some sense of freedom, at ongoing expense to Australian taxpayers.

But there were many restrictions and Kopika, who has been distressed at the separation of her family, would now have to settle into a new school.

"There needs to be a shift in how the government looks at this case. I'm not so certain we are there yet.

"Which means does the fight go on? Well it probably does."

Under the terms of community detention, the parents cannot work.

They must live where the government tells them to, and cannot have overnight guests, or stay elsewhere overnight without permission.

They will also have to report regularly to authorities, but Ms Ford says it's not clear yet how often.

Aron MyIvaganam from the Tamil Refugee Council said the government's move was not one of compassion, but "an act of concession" resulting from public pressure.

"The government is basically sending this family from one detention to another detention where Nades will not be able to go to work, the family will still have so many restrictions ... this is not freedom," he said.

"We will continue our fight until this family is fully freed. Their home is in Biloela."

A charter flight is on it's way to the island to collect Nades and Kopika as Tharnicaa continues to recover in hospital from an infection she developed on Christmas Island.

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