First, we're very honoured to be given the opportunity to present to the standing committee. You're correct that we have a piece of legislation ourselves that is shortly to have its first reading. It was tabled on Monday, the day before yesterday, and will have its first reading and be referred to select committee for examination by Parliament tomorrow, Thursday.
I would first like to say that New Zealand is in a different situation from Canada. Obviously we share many similarities: we have the same political system; we are signatories to the convention on the status of refugees. But New Zealand has the unusual situation of being the most isolated country in the world. We're 1,600 kilometres from our nearest neighbour, which is Australia, and we are separated by extremely dangerous waters; we therefore have nobody walking or driving across our borders and many fewer people arriving by boat, legitimately or otherwise. Almost everyone who comes to New Zealand comes here by air, and we have secure borders because we have at least a three-hour air flight from any port to any of our international airports, and often more like ten hours.
We share the same concerns around unauthorized movement of people. We have the same situation of being a country founded to a very large extent on immigration, and one that welcomes legal migrants, both permanent residents and our tourism and student and worker populations. We are concerned to ensure that the situation in sending countries as much as possible is ameliorated so that push factors do not impinge on people to the extent that they desperately try to seek refuge in another country.
Like Canada, New Zealand is very interested in working with other countries to help ameliorate the situation of people in the countries from which asylum claimants are most likely to be sourced. Nonetheless, there is another side as well, which is deterring the smugglers who want to make profits from exploiting the desperation of people looking for a better life who may not be able to access what they are seeking.
With regard to the bill, just briefly, it is specifically about deterring a mass arrival by sea. We have never had a mass arrival. We have had reports of people having set out to attempt to come to New Zealand. As far as we're aware, everyone who has tried to do that has either been shipwrecked on land or has drowned at sea. We do not consider this to be something that people should ever be driven to, so the bill is very focused upon deterring people through a combination of some measures that are really to ensure that we could manage a mass arrival as well as possible, but also to ensure that, while we remain within what the convention says we should do with regard to people who are found to need protection, they would not have all of the opportunities around family reunification that are given to other people who migrate through other means.
We have many fewer asylum seekers than Canada, as I think you could probably have inferred from what I've already said. Last year we had around 300 people claim protection. That was mostly on shore; it was mostly people who had been granted visas or who had entered visa-free and who claimed after arrival. About a third to a quarter came at our borders. Wherever we are not able to ascertain people's identity, then they are detained, generally in a very low-security institution, until we can ascertain their identity.
People who are determined to be a risk, of course, will be detained in a higher-security institution. We don't have any immigration-specific facilities because the numbers are so small, so it does mean that people would generally be detained in a prison.
We approve around one-quarter to one-third of people, as it is found that around one-quarter to one-third of people to have justified claims. The vast majority of them will proceed to permanent residence after that.
With our bill the difference will be that they will have a three-year period of being on a work visa, during which time they will be entitled to social security assistance if they cannot find employment. At the end of that three-year period their circumstances will be reassessed against the convention's grounds, and if they're found to still require protection, then at that point they will be granted permanent residence and immediate family will be able to join them.
I'm trying to think what else would be of interest.