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Samoan grandmother who overstayed for more than 30 years granted NZ residency

After 31 years as an overstayer, grandmother has residency
Wellington, NEW ZEALAND — A Samoan grandmother living illegally in New Zealand for 31 years has been granted residency.

South Auckland Sunday School teacher Lesa Matagitau, 53, was last year served a deportation order and was terrified at the thought of going back to Samoa where she has no immediate family members and had no apparent means to support herself.

She was married in New Zealand, gave birth to five children here and her parents live here but she never managed to get her residency sorted.

Matagitau claims she believed she had residency through her 1991 marriage to a Samoan man who had permanent residency. If she had received good advice, the situation could have been resolved much earlier, she said.

She arrived in New Zealand on a visitor permit in December 1986, and it expired in March 1987.
Her children are all New Zealand citizens.

Matagitau's parents moved from Samoa and became permanent residents in 2001 after she applied for a visa through the family category.

During the process, she discovered she was not a resident, so got a six-month visitor visa.

When it ran out in December that year she did not try to get another one.

Matagitau tried to renew her Samoan passport in 2013, but authorities told her she was unlawfully in the country.

Then last May, Matagitau was detained and served with a deportation order.

She described being in a police cell and waiting to be deported as the worst time of her life.

"I was crying and thinking of my children and grandchildren, and how I may never see them again," Matagitau said.

"I was worried for them, but I prayed and I prayed really hard and never lost hope."

Immigration lawyer Kamil Lakshman, who Matagitau's family contacted while she was being detained, got a one-day visitor visa from the former associate immigration minister so she could appeal to the Immigration and Protection Tribunal on humanitarian grounds.
After what has been described as "a long and arduous process", the tribunal found last month that Matagitau had grounds to remain in the country.

Read more at NZ Herald