3.2 The Tribunal's decision
12 The appellants appeared before the Tribunal on 13 October 2014 to give evidence and present arguments. They were represented in relation to the review by their registered migration agent.
13 On 4 June 2015, the Tribunal affirmed the decision of the delegate not to grant the visas to the appellants.
14 In its reasons, the Tribunal found that, as Ms Kaur was at the time of its decision enrolled in an Advanced Diploma of Business as her principal course, the subclass that may be granted was Subclass 572. Contrary to the delegate's conclusion, the Tribunal found that Ms Kaur was not a person designated under reg 2.07AO, and therefore that the issue was whether she satisfied cl 572.223(2)(a)(ii) as it read at the date of application.
15 The Tribunal found that Ms Kaur did not meet an essential requirement in that it was not satisfied that she was a genuine applicant for entry and stay as a student on several bases including the following grounds.
(1) The Tribunal considered that Ms Kaur had failed to reconcile inconsistent evidence as to her past and future career and study intentions, including her evidence that she wished to pursue nursing despite the fact that the courses in which she was enrolled related to business (and, formerly, hospitality management).
(2) With respect to the "limited qualifications" Ms Kaur had achieved over six and a half years, the Tribunal was not satisfied that the medical issues referred to in the medical documents provided by her had any significant impact such that she was precluded from remaining enrolled for any significant period or from successfully pursuing studies for any significant period (at [25]; see also at [27]).
(3) Ms Kaur's explanation as to why she did not pursue a nursing career earlier despite giving evidence that this was her intention after completing her business course was, in the Tribunal's view, particularly unsatisfactory and added to its concern that she was "undertaking short inexpensive courses in Australia to prolong her stay unrelated to real vocational or academic success" (at [26]). The Tribunal found that if Ms Kaur had truly wished to pursue studies in nursing she could have done so potentially many years ago, and her failure to do so for well over six years undermined her claim to be a genuine student temporarily in Australia.
(4) The Tribunal did not accept the adequacy of Ms Kaur's explanation for not pursuing nursing earlier, namely, that her migration agent had not advised her that there was a college which provided nursing training in Melbourne (at [29]).
(5) The Tribunal also considered that Ms Kaur's further explanation for not undertaking a nursing course in Australia (namely, her parents' financial difficulties) presented a "significant incentive for [Ms Kaur] not to return to her home country" (at [30]).
(6) Nor was the Tribunal satisfied that the business courses have any real relationship to the proposed nursing career (at [29]).
16 Given these and other difficulties with Ms Kaur's evidence, the Tribunal found that the criteria for the grant of a Subclass 572 visa were not met and affirmed the decision under review.