Biloela family to be released from Christmas Island after two years and reunited in Australia

The Biloela family are set to be released from Christmas Island after two years apart and reunited in Australia.        

The federal government has been weighing up what to do with the Murugappan family as it faces mounting pressure to let them stay in Australia, where both of their children were born.

Treasurer Josh Frydenberg said Tuesday morning the family would be reunited ‘very soon’ and that they will be returning to Australia. 

‘This process, this family have gone on Christmas Island for a very long time,’ he told Sky News.

‘The good news, the positive development is the family will be reunited on Autsralian shores very shortly.’ 

He would not confirm if they would be allowed to stay in Australia.  

Tharnicaa Murugappan (pictured) was medically evacuated to Perth after being hospitalised on Christmas Island with a suspected blood infection

The family's plight is back in the spotlight after four-year-old Tharnicaa was flown with her mother from Christmas Island to the mainland for medical treatment

The family’s plight is back in the spotlight after four-year-old Tharnicaa was flown with her mother from Christmas Island to the mainland for medical treatment

It is understood Immigration Minister Alex Hawke will announce their release from detention in Canberra on Tuesday.

However, it is unclear whether he will announce their new visa status or just a process for them to follow in order to get a visa.

A spokesman for the minister said the decision was ‘imminent’.

The release would enable the family to reunite in Perth. 

The family’s plight is back in the spotlight after four-year-old Tharnicaa was flown with her mother from Christmas Island to the mainland for medical treatment.

Tharnicaa’s mother Priya is with her at Perth Children’s Hospital, but her father and older sister were forced to stay behind on the island. 

Earlier on Monday, Deputy Prime Minister Michael McCormack said work was underway to bring Nades and Kopika, 6, to Perth.

‘I understand the health authorities in WA also make these considerations as to whether the whole family gets reunited,’ he told reporters.

‘But as I understand, there was work being done towards that.’

Mr Murugappan and Kopika were still on Christmas Island as of Monday afternoon.

Priya and Nades Murugappan and their two young daughters (pictured) have been on the island for the past three years

Priya and Nades Murugappan and their two young daughters (pictured) have been on the island for the past three years

It is unclear whether they will be flown to Perth on a commercial flight or a government chartered plane.

The head of the Western Australian health department wrote to the Department of Home Affairs last week advising the Murugappan family be reunited in Perth.

It was not a plea for compassion but based on clinical advice of the Tharnicaa’s treating doctors that she must be with family.

Her treatment for pneumonia and sepsis, a life-threatening blood infection, could take up to eight weeks.

Prime Minister Scott Morrison said the government was considering its options and would take advice from medical experts at the Department of Home Affairs.

Pressure has been mounting on Mr Morrison to let the family stay in Australia, with politicians from across the spectrum calling for them to be allowed to return to their adopted home of Biloela in Queensland.

Kopika (left) gets taken to school by guards while Priya stays inside to look after four-year-old Tharunicaa (right)

Kopika (left) gets taken to school by guards while Priya stays inside to look after four-year-old Tharunicaa (right) 

He has signalled the government could finally back away from its hardline stance and allow the family to stay in Australia, at least on a temporary basis.

‘There are options that are being considered that are consistent with both health advice and the humanitarian need and the government’s policy,’ Mr Morrison said.

However, the prime minister said permanent resettlement was out of the question.

‘That wouldn’t be government policy for a pathway to permanent settlement – that is not the government’s policy.’

Nine health organisations representing tens of thousands of medical professionals across Australia have signed an open letter calling for the family’s release.

Paediatrician Jacqueline Small from the Royal Australasian College of Physicians said the children must be allowed to develop and grow in the community.

Tharnicaa reads a book from her bed in Perth hospital on Thursday where she is being treated for sepsis. The announcement comes amid growing calls for the federal government to resettle the family

Tharnicaa reads a book from her bed in Perth hospital on Thursday where she is being treated for sepsis. The announcement comes amid growing calls for the federal government to resettle the family

‘We feel very strongly keeping these children in held detention, particularly offshore detention, represents an extreme and unacceptable risk to the children’s health, development and mental wellbeing,’ she told ABC radio.

‘Given both children were in held detention from their toddlerhood, the risks are even higher.’

Nationals MP Barnaby Joyce has supported calls for the family to stay in Australia for more than two years.

‘Tharnicaa and Kopika were born in Australia,’ he told Network Seven.

‘Now, maybe if their names were Jane and Sally and they were playing in their local netball side, we’d think twice about sending them back to another country which they’re not from.’

The government is expected to announce the Murugappan family's (pictured) release from detention on Tuesday, allowing father Nades and Kopika, 6, to reunite with mother Priya and Tharnicaa in Perth

The government is expected to announce the Murugappan family’s (pictured) release from detention on Tuesday, allowing father Nades and Kopika, 6, to reunite with mother Priya and Tharnicaa in Perth

Mr Joyce also argued Mr and Mrs Murugappan had jobs and were valued members of their local community.

‘In regional Australia, we need people who have jobs. These people should be staying here.’

Labor leader Anthony Albanese rejected the argument showing the family compassion and exercising discretion would somehow restart the people-smuggling trade.

‘This is about a family who are here, this is not a threat to our national sovereignty,’ he said. 

Labor leader Anthony Albanese rejected the argument that allowing the family to settle would somehow restart the people-smuggling trade. Pictured: Priya and Nades

Labor leader Anthony Albanese rejected the argument that allowing the family to settle would somehow restart the people-smuggling trade. Pictured: Priya and Nades