Chapter 6 Extradition Treaty
between Australia and the Republic of India, and Treaty between Australia and
the Republic of India on Mutual Legal Assistance in Criminal Matters
Background
6.1
The Extradition Treaty between Australia and the Republic of India
(the Extradition Treaty) and the Treaty between Australia and the Republic
of India on Mutual Legal Assistance in Criminal Matters (Mutual Legal
Assistance Treaty) are regarded as linked treaties by the Australian Government
and as a consequence will be examined together in this chapter.
The Extradition Treaty
6.2
The Extradition Treaty is based on a model extradition treaty developed
by Australia to conform to Australia’s domestic legislative framework.[1]
Australia’s model extradition treaty has been used to develop a network of
bilateral extradition treaties that currently number 35. [2]
6.3
Australia’s current extradition relationship with India is based on the Commonwealth
Scheme for the Rendition of Fugitive Offenders 1966. This was an agreement
of less than treaty status between members of the Commonwealth. Consequently,
the agreement is non-binding in international law and imposes no obligations on
participating states.[3]
6.4
The Australian Government has negotiated this treaty because of the
requirement under the Commonwealth Scheme to provide a full brief of evidence
sufficient to establish a prima facie case in support of an extradition
request.[4] The Attorney-General’s
Department (AGD) described the requirement to establish a prima facie case as:
…a very high evidentiary standard [that] can cause
considerable delay, both in the requesting country, which has to prepare the
brief of evidence, and for the requested country, which has to analyse whether
a prima facie case has been made out.
6.5
According to the AGD, international developments in extradition matters
since the late 1980s have indicated a trend towards simplifying the extradition
process by establishing a ‘no evidence’ standard of information for extradition
requests.[5] The no evidence standard
means that a country requesting an extradition is not required to make an
evidentiary case as part of the extradition request.
6.6
The no evidence standard is argued to be a useful tool to aid
extradition to and from countries that use a civil law system. The AGD asserted
that the legal framework in a civil law system means that many of the system’s
practitioners do not understand what is meant by a prima facie case.[6]
6.7
In practice, the no evidence standard still involves some assessment by
the requested Government as to the legitimacy of the request. The assessment
is principally against the grounds for refusing an extradition request, [7]
which are set out below.
6.8
While Australia prefers a no evidence standard; that is, no evidence is
required to be included as part of an extradition request, Indian domestic
legal requirements necessitate that the requesting country must include an
evidentiary case that is a less than prima facie case as part of the
extradition request.[8]
6.9
According to the AGD:
The standard required in this treaty is such information as
would reasonably establish that the person sought has committed the offence for
which extradition is requested and to establish that the person requested is
the person to whom the warrant refers. This standard does not require that
every element of an offence be supported by evidence. Instead, there needs to
be evidence that links the individual to the crime without necessarily proving
each element of the offence.[9]
Proposed extradition process
6.10
The Extradition Treaty will apply to Australian and Indian nationals who
are wanted for prosecution, or for the imposition or enforcement of a sentence,
in relation to sentences with a minimum punishment of at least one year in
jail.[10]
6.11
Where a request for extradition is received, the Extradition Treaty will
require that the receiving country represent the requesting country in the
extradition matter, including representing the requesting country in any
proceedings arising out of the request.[11]
6.12
There are a number of grounds for refusing extradition:
n the offence concerned
is a military offence and there is no similar offence under criminal law;
n the period of time
available to commence a prosecution has lapsed;
n the offence concerned
carries the death penalty, and the requesting nation has not guaranteed that
the death penalty will not be imposed or carried out;
n the offence concerned
is of a political character;
n the person concerned
will be exposed to double jeopardy (that is, they will be at risk of standing
trial twice for the same offence);
n there are grounds for
suspecting that the extradition request was made on account of the person’s
race, sex, religion, nationality or political opinion;
n the person is liable
to be tried or sentenced in an extraordinary or ad hoc court; and
n The request does not
comply with international treaties such as the Convention against Torture
and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment.[12]
6.13
If a request for extradition is not granted, the requesting country can
then ask that the person be tried where they are. The country in receipt of
this request must submit the case to its competent authorities for prosecution.[13]
6.14
The Extradition Treaty also establishes agreed procedures for dealing
with the following extradition related matters:
n the provisional
arrest of the person concerned pending consideration of a request;
n the receipt of
extradition requests from two different countries for the same person;
n the transfer of the
person to the requesting country;
n the transfer of the
property of the extradited person to the requesting country; and
n the postponement of
an extradition where the person is already under prosecution or serving a
sentence.[14]
The Mutual Legal Assistance Treaty
6.15
Like the Extradition Treaty, the Mutual Legal Assistance Treaty is based
on a model mutual legal assistance treaty developed by Australia. The model
mutual legal assistance treaty has been used to develop a network of bilateral
treaties that currently number 25.[15]
6.16
The Mutual Legal Assistance Treaty is intended to assist the signatory
countries to investigate, prosecute and suppress crimes including terrorism,
drug trafficking, fraud, money laundering and people trafficking.[16]
6.17
There are extensive similarities between the Extradition Treaty and the
Mutual Legal Assistance Treaty, including the fact that the Mutual Legal
Assistance Treaty will replace a Commonwealth based arrangement of less than
treaty status, the Scheme Relating to Mutual Assistance in Criminal Matters
within the Commonwealth.[17] However, in this case,
there are no significant changes to the functional arrangements within the
Treaty. The new Mutual Legal Assistance Treaty is limited to making the
current arrangements subject to international law.[18]
Proposed legal assistance process
6.18
Under the Mutual Legal Assistance Treaty, Australia and India have
agreed to grant each other assistance in:
n serving documents;
n the taking of
statements and evidence from a person;
n locating and
identifying a person;
n executing requests to
search premises and seize potential evidence; and
n locating, restraining
and forfeiting the proceeds of criminal activity.[19]
6.19
As with the Extradition Treaty, there are a number of grounds for
refusing to comply with a request, including:
n the offence concerned
is of a political character;
n the request would expose
the person concerned to double jeopardy (that is, they will be at risk of
standing trial twice for the same offence);
n there are grounds for
suspecting that the request was made on account of the person’s race, sex,
religion, nationality or political opinion; and
n complying with the
request would impair the security or sovereignty of the country receiving the
request.[20]
Previous recommendations
6.20
The Committee last considered an extradition treaty and mutual legal
assistance treaty (with the United Arab Emirates) in 2008, and reported its
findings in Report 91.[21] The Committee made a
number of recommendations as part of that Report with the intention of
establishing a process to monitor the trial status, health, and conditions of
detention of people extradited from Australia. The Government’s Response to
that Report was tabled on 17 December 2009.
6.21
The relevant recommendations proposed the monitoring process take the
following form:
n the country that has
made the extradition request report on the trial status, and health of the
person concerned, and the condition of the detention facilities in which they
are held;
n the Department of Foreign
Affairs and Trade report on extradited Australian citizens;
n where a foreign
national is extradited to their country of origin, that country be required to
report on their status to Australia; and
n where a foreign
national is extradited to a third country, that person’s country of citizenship
should be asked to report on their status to Australia.[22]
6.22
The Government did not accept these recommendations on the following
grounds:
n it is not aware of
any precedents for such a requirement in existing bilateral and multilateral
extradition agreements;[23]
n potential bilateral
treaty partners would not accept a requirement to report on persons extradited
from Australia, on the basis that it would provide an administrative burden
that would hinder the operation of a treaty partner’s judicial system;[24]
n extradited Australians
are already provided normal consular support if they so request; [25]
and
n the conditions of extradited
non citizens is a matter for their country of nationality.[26]
6.23
During the current inquiry, the AGD reiterated the Government’s
response, and further added that:
n if a credible
monitoring process was to be undertaken by Australia this would involve issues
of resources and infringement of the sovereignty of the country requesting the
extradition;[27] and
n Australia can only
offer consular assistance in relation to its own citizens where they have made
a request for assistance.[28]
6.24
The Committee notes that the Government’s reasoning in rejecting these
recommendations focuses on the procedural and administrative barriers to
establishing a process to monitor the trial status, health, and conditions of
detention of people extradited from Australia. The Government has not rejected
the concept of monitoring per se.
6.25
The Committee believes the grounds for monitoring extradited persons are
sound. The no evidence approach prevents the examination of the evidence for
the offence that has prompted the extradition request. The evidence for the
offence would in the past have been examined closely. In addition, the no
evidence standard is designed to increase the speed at which extraditions can
be processed. Both of these outcomes of the no evidence standard introduce
risks for which, at the moment, there is no mitigation. The risks include
that:
n an important aspect
of the case that would normally have been examined in a prima facie case, and
that may adversely affect the person facing deportation, is missed; and
n as a result of faster
processing and less thorough examination of a case, an important point, that
should have come to light in a no evidence extradition process, is missed by accident.
6.26
The Committee believes that monitoring extradited persons would
represent an effective means of mitigating the risks associated with a no
evidence standard.
6.27
The Committee continues to believe, as pointed out in Report 91, that
Australia has a moral obligation to protect the human rights of extradited
persons beyond simply accepting the undertakings of countries making
extradition requests.[29] Australia must never be
a party, directly or indirectly, to any injustice or abuse of the human rights
of persons it has extradited, and regardless of whether the persons concerned
are Australian citizens or not. While the Committee acknowledges that the risk
of such an occurrence may be small, Australia currently has no formal process
to ensure that, following extradition, a person’s human rights are protected.
6.28
Monitoring the conditions of extradited persons could also enhance
public confidence in Australia’s extradition framework. Public confidence in
Australia’s approach to extradition could be severely damaged if abuses of an
extradited person’s human rights were to occur and Australia was found to have
done nothing to try to prevent it.
6.29
For these reasons, the Committee wishes to make again the recommendation
contained in Report 91.
Recommendation 4 |
|
The Committee recommends that new and revised extradition
agreements should explicitly provide a requirement that the requesting
country provide annual information concerning the trial status and health of
extradited persons and the conditions of the detention facilities in which
they are held.
|
Ensuring the wellbeing of Australian citizens
6.30
While Australian citizens who have been extradited have access to
consular support where they request it, the Committee believes this is not
sufficient to ensure the wellbeing of these Australians. There may be a number
of reasons why a person does not request consular assistance. This may include
the person not wanting assistance, but it may also include real or perceived
intimidation, fear of reprisal, ignorance, poor mental or physical health, or
difficulties communicating.
6.31
The Committee believes that, unless the person involved has made
explicit their objection to consular assistance to the satisfaction of consular
officers, all Australians who are subject to extradition should receive a face
to face visit from a consular official at least annually.
Recommendation 5 |
|
The Committee recommends that all Australians who are
subject to extradition should receive a face to face meeting with an
Australian consular official, except where the person has made explicit their
objection to consular assistance to the satisfaction of consular officers.
|
Advice of extradition
6.32
In relation to foreign nationals who are extradited from Australia to a
third country, the first step should be to formally advise the government of
their home country that one of its nationals has been extradited from Australia
to a third country. The Committee understands this does not occur at present.[30]
Recommendation 6 |
|
The Committee recommends that, when a foreign national is
extradited from Australia to a third country, the Australian Government
formally advise the government of that person’s country of citizenship that
one of its nationals has been extradited from Australia to a third country.
|
Conclusion
6.33
The Committee fully supports the Extradition Treaty and the Mutual Legal
Assistance Treaty with India. It is clear that these treaties will streamline
the extradition and legal assistance processes, improving the quality of law
enforcement in Australia and India.
6.34
The bulk of the Committee’s recommendations relate to future extradition
treaties. It seems clear to the Committee that the concept of a process to
monitor the trial status, health, and conditions of detention of people
extradited from Australia has merit. The Committee believes that there is a
moral imperative that Australia never be a party to any injustice or abuse of
the human rights of persons it has extradited.
Recommendation 7 |
|
The Committee supports the Extradition Treaty between
Australia and the Republic of India and the Treaty between Australia
and the Republic of India on Mutual Legal Assistance in Criminal Matters and
recommends that binding treaty action be taken.
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