Published: 17:16, November 13, 2023 | Updated: 17:33, November 13, 2023
Aussie public servants face probe for illegal debt recovery program
By Xinhua

This photo shows a general view of the Australian Parliament House building in Canberra on June 15, 2023. (PHOTO / AFP)

CANBERRA - Sixteen Australian public servants are under investigation for their role in an illegal debt recovery scheme, the federal government has confirmed.

The Australian government on Monday officially responded to the findings of the Royal Commission into the Robodebt Scheme, accepting all 56 of the report's recommendations including criminal investigations into public servants across two government departments who oversaw the debt-raising policy.

Launched in 2015, Robodebt aimed to recover 1.7 billion Australian dollars ($1.08 billion) from people the former government claimed were cheating the welfare system

Launched in 2015, Robodebt aimed to recover 1.7 billion Australian dollars ($1.08 billion) from people the former government claimed were cheating the welfare system.

The royal commission, which handed down its final 990-page report in July, found that 721 million Australian dollars ($458.6 million) were wrongfully recovered from 381,000 people before the "cruel" scheme was declared unlawful by the Federal Court in 2019.

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Mark Dreyfus, Australia's Attorney-General, said at a press conference on Monday that Robodebt was a shameful chapter in the country's history that "destroyed" innocent lives.

"This was not an innocent mistake, this was a deliberate, calculated scheme," he said.

"In essence, people were traumatized on the off-chance they might owe money."

Delivering the government's response, Dreyfus, Finance and Public Service Minister Katy Gallagher, Social Services Minister Amanda Rishworth and Government Services Minister Bill Shorten revealed that the public service commissioner has commenced investigations into all 16 public servants the Royal Commission referred for prosecution.

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They said the government has hired an additional 3,000 staff to implement the inquiry's recommendations and committed 22.1 million Australian dollars ($14.05 million) in new funding over the next four years to help do so.

Shorten officially apologized to victims of the scheme in a speech to Parliament in August.