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Oct 27, 2025

Parliamentarians Receive Tailored Cyber-Essentials Training Amid Rising Migration Fraud

Parliamentarians Receive Tailored Cyber-Essentials Training Amid Rising Migration Fraud
The University of Canberra and Cisco launched “Securing Our Future: Cyber Essentials for Parliamentarians” at Parliament House on the evening of 27 October 2025, drawing senior ministers including Tony Burke, whose expanded Home Affairs portfolio now covers Immigration and Cyber Security. The program offers MPs and staff a series of virtual and in-person workshops designed to counter cyber threats ranging from foreign-state espionage to migration-agent credential theft.

Speakers highlighted how parliamentary email addresses are prime targets for scammers seeking visa-status information or lobbying documents. Cisco Vice-President Stefan Leitl demonstrated real-time detection of spoofed immigration-status queries, while Bill Shorten, now University of Canberra Vice-Chancellor, stressed the need for lawmakers to grasp both policy and technical dimensions of mobility-related cyber risks.

The launch coincides with the government’s push to digitise immigration processes—such as smartphone-based biometrics—and follows a July incident where hackers tried to access MPs’ constituency-casework files containing sensitive visa data.

Over the next week, MPs will complete modules on “Cyber 101,” cloud-security hygiene and incident-response playbooks. Graduates earn a micro-credential recognised under the Australian Qualifications Framework, a first for parliamentary professional development.

While the training targets politicians, the broader message is clear: as Australia modernises its migration systems, safeguarding personal data across the mobility ecosystem is a national-security imperative.
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