Mr BOWEN (McMahon—Minister for Immigration and Citizenship) (14:54): I thank the honourable member for his question. I note that last week he said there were 'urgent and important' questions to answer but he forgot to ask any of them yesterday. It is a matter of public record that Mr Ali Al Abassi had been under investigation by the Australian Federal Police for some time. The Australian Federal Police did not have enough evidence to successfully refer him for prosecution and nor were there grounds—or are there currently grounds—to cancel his visa on character grounds. The member for Cook has been alleging all of last week— Mr Morrison: Madam Deputy Speaker, I rise on a point of order on direct relevance. The minister was asked: when was Captain Emad placed on the movement alert list? The DEPUTY SPEAKER: The minister has the call and will refer to the question. Mr BOWEN: The member for Cook said all of last week that Mr Al Abassi had been on the movement alert list for some time and that I should have known. But again he has not checked his facts—and he has not checked his facts today and he has taken out of context things said by my ministerial colleagues. Mr Al Abassi was under AFP investigation and was on the watch list known as PACE, which is an AFP watch list. He was placed on the movement alert list, managed by my department, on 7 June. The member for Cook has said that the minister for immigration should be aware of every person who is on the movement alert list. Given that there are 639,000 identities on the movement alert list and 1.71 million documents on the movement alert list, I look forward to him implementing that policy if he is ever minister for immigration.