
A confidential Coalition discussion paper labelled “Operation Gatekeeper” was leaked overnight, revealing a proposal to amend the Migration Act so a future Liberal-National government could halt visa lodgements from any person who has lived in one of 37 “declared terrorist areas” across 13 countries—including Gaza, Yemen, parts of Somalia, Afghanistan, Nigeria and the southern Philippines—for up to three years.
The document argues that blanket suspensions are needed to cut national-security risk and ease processing backlogs, but refugee advocates, business peak bodies and several Liberal backbenchers have condemned the idea as discriminatory, unworkable and economically self-defeating. Critics warn that it would bar genuine students, highly skilled workers and family-reunion applicants simply because of their last place of residence, undermining Australia’s stated goal of attracting global talent.
Industry groups representing universities, tech firms and resources companies said the plan would worsen current labour shortages and complicate existing commercial links in the Middle East, Africa and South-East Asia. Former Liberal immigration spokesperson Paul Scarr told ABC News that he had “zero input” into the draft and that it contradicts longstanding party policy in favour of risk-based individual vetting.
For individuals and organisations trying to keep pace with such shifting policies, VisaHQ offers practical assistance. Their Australia portal (https://www.visahq.com/australia/) aggregates the latest entry rules, security advisories and document checklists, helping students, skilled workers and HR departments lodge accurate applications and adapt quickly as requirements change.
The episode has also put pressure on Labor, with ministers seizing on the leak to portray the Opposition as lurching toward Trump-style exclusion zones. Home Affairs officials privately noted that a modern visa system already allows real-time security refusals without territorial bans, and warned that mass suspensions could invite legal challenges under Australia’s international obligations.
While the proposal is unlikely to advance in its current form, the leak has reignited debate about how far Australia should go in using migration controls to manage geopolitical risk. Multinational employers with talent pipelines in the affected regions are now advising assignees to lodge applications as soon as possible, in case a future government revives elements of the plan.
The document argues that blanket suspensions are needed to cut national-security risk and ease processing backlogs, but refugee advocates, business peak bodies and several Liberal backbenchers have condemned the idea as discriminatory, unworkable and economically self-defeating. Critics warn that it would bar genuine students, highly skilled workers and family-reunion applicants simply because of their last place of residence, undermining Australia’s stated goal of attracting global talent.
Industry groups representing universities, tech firms and resources companies said the plan would worsen current labour shortages and complicate existing commercial links in the Middle East, Africa and South-East Asia. Former Liberal immigration spokesperson Paul Scarr told ABC News that he had “zero input” into the draft and that it contradicts longstanding party policy in favour of risk-based individual vetting.
For individuals and organisations trying to keep pace with such shifting policies, VisaHQ offers practical assistance. Their Australia portal (https://www.visahq.com/australia/) aggregates the latest entry rules, security advisories and document checklists, helping students, skilled workers and HR departments lodge accurate applications and adapt quickly as requirements change.
The episode has also put pressure on Labor, with ministers seizing on the leak to portray the Opposition as lurching toward Trump-style exclusion zones. Home Affairs officials privately noted that a modern visa system already allows real-time security refusals without territorial bans, and warned that mass suspensions could invite legal challenges under Australia’s international obligations.
While the proposal is unlikely to advance in its current form, the leak has reignited debate about how far Australia should go in using migration controls to manage geopolitical risk. Multinational employers with talent pipelines in the affected regions are now advising assignees to lodge applications as soon as possible, in case a future government revives elements of the plan.









