Chapter 4 Review mechanisms for ongoing detention
4.1
Accountability and review mechanisms are essential for any area of government
administration and particularly so when this administration may result in a decision
regarding the length of detention or release from detention.
4.2
In its subsequent reports to be tabled in 2009, the Committee will consider
the oversight system for immigration detention facilities, including scrutiny
of conditions and service provision to people in immigration detention.
4.3
The previous two chapters of this report have addressed criteria for
release from immigration detention under the Minister’s announcements of 29 July 2008. Under the Committee’s terms of reference for this inquiry it has also been
charged with examining the criteria that should be applied in determining how
long a person should be held in immigration detention.
4.1
In the context of the announced values under which immigration detention
shall be a last resort and for the shortest possible time, this chapter
considers length of detention and mechanisms for reviewing the need for a
person’s ongoing detention, including:
n the format and
effectiveness of the three month review by the Department of Immigration and
Citizenship (DIAC)
n the format,
effectiveness and powers of the six month review by the Commonwealth Ombudsman,
and
n other options such as
merits and judicial review.
4.2
The chapter also examines possible improvements to the accountability
and transparency of decision-making, and concludes with discussion on the value
of reflecting the reforms in legislative changes.
Framework for the review of ongoing detention
4.3
As part of the 29 July 2008 announcements, the Minister of Immigration
and Citizenship outlined a two-stage review framework to assess cases of
ongoing detention. This framework would consist of an internal review at the
three month mark conducted by DIAC and a review by the Commonwealth Ombudsman
at the six month mark.[1]
4.4
Following these announcements, DIAC informed the Committee in September
2008 that its highest priority activity for implementation of the values was
looking at ‘greater review mechanisms in terms of the decisions to detain’.[2]
4.5
Transparency and accountability in the review of immigration detention decisions
is essential. In the past the system has been undermined by maladministration,
highlighted by a number of high profile cases of the unlawful detention of
Australian citizens or residents, and by prolonged detention of some with no
explanation or justification provided to the detainee or their advocate for the
delays resulting in years of detention.
4.6
Any changes to the immigration detention framework will not be
meaningful without a credible system of accountability and review of detention
decisions. This is vital to ensure the full implementation of the announced values,
to ensure a cultural change in the administration of Australia’s detention
decision-making, and to restore public confidence in the justness and humanity
of Australia immigration detention policy.
Three month review by the Department of Immigration and Citizenship
Current internal review mechanisms
4.7
DIAC have advised the Committee that each detention case is currently
reviewed as follows:
n by a Detention Review
Manager to assess the lawfulness and reasonableness of the initial compliance decision
to detain (within 24 hours if the identity of the client is known or 48 hours
if identity is unknown), and
n every 28 days by the
Detention Review Manager and a Case Manager.
4.8
The mandatory reviews every 28 days are intended to ensure that:
…detention of each person remains lawful and reasonable,
knowledge or reasonable suspicion continues to be held that the person is an
unlawful non-citizen, outstanding identity issues have been followed up, and
follow-up of issues relating to the client are conducted through appropriate
means of referral or escalation. [3]
4.9
When considering whether there are any alternatives to immigration
detention, the Detention Review Manager must review the decision of the
detaining officer that the grant of a bridging visa is not appropriate. As part
of their review, the Detention Review Manager must also be satisfied that
alternative places of accommodation have been considered for clients, including
community detention options.[4]
4.10
In 2007-08, only 74 per cent of ongoing decisions to detain were
reviewed by the Detention Review Manager within ‘service standards’, which is
taken to mean within the specified 28 days.[5] This would suggest that
around one quarter of decisions to detain were not reviewed with the expected
28 days.
Format of the three month review
4.11
In his speech of 29 July 2008, the Minister for Immigration and
Citizenship said that there would be a new internal review conducted three
months after the initial detention. The Minister said that:
In determining the ongoing detention of a person, the onus of
proof will be reversed. A departmental decision maker will have to justify why
a person should be detained against these values that presume that that person
should be in the community.[6]
4.12
The three month internal review is ‘to make sure we do not let the
issues lapse for want of action’.[7] This review will be
conducted by a ‘senior departmental officer’.[8] It is not known at what
public service level that person will be; nor has it been confirmed whether it
will be a single officer or several. The Committee recommends that the review
is conducted by an officer at Deputy Secretary, First Assistant Secretary or
Assistant Secretary level.
4.13
DIAC has indicated that its implementation model for the review aims for
a process that is:
n comprehensive,
considering the totality of the client's immigration history
n investigative, and
consider the validity of all departmental actions and decisions
n analytical,
questioning the reasoning and evidence underpinning departmental decisions, and
n challenging, actively
querying departmental actions, requiring responses to concerns identified.[9]
4.14
If approved, it is proposed this model would be fully implemented by
January 2009.
Effectiveness of the review
4.15
While many inquiry participants welcomed the commitment to increased
formal review, there were fears that as this review was not independent of the
detaining authority, its effectiveness would be compromised or at the very
least, limited.[10] While the Minister has
stated that the onus to justify detention will be placed on DIAC, in effect at
the three month review DIAC is only required to justify the decision to detain internally.
4.16
While there was support for the intent of the review framework, there
was some criticism of DIAC’s corporate culture and their capacity to
effectively self-monitor. A Just Australia stated that:
It is unclear to what body a departmental officer must
justify detention… DIAC does not have an appropriate track record of internal
reviews, given that this is the same department that in recent years has
unlawfully detained hundreds of people and unlawfully deported an Australian
citizen. [11]
4.17
Anna Copeland, of the Southern Communities Advocacy Legal and Education
Services Community Legal Centre in Western Australia, said:
I think under the current law the Department of Immigration
is given enormous power in terms of determining when a person will be released
or determining that a person is an unlawful non-citizen, and we know that that
has led to some problems, which were investigated by the Palmer and Comrie
inquiry.[12]
4.18
Other witnesses also noted that the three month review would be
undertaken by a department with a track record of risk aversion and a
presumption in favour of detention, despite recent reductions in the use of
detention for some groups such as visa overstayers. The Refugee and Immigration
Legal Centre (RILC) in Melbourne drew on DIAC’s administration of bridging
visas for vulnerable people in immigration detention as evidence of this:
The presumption of detention has been strong, and has included
only limited legal exceptions… In practice these limited exceptions were
systematically applied in an overly restrictive, arbitrary and, on occasion,
even capricious manner… In RILC's experience, the institutional approach was
characterised by a strong presumption against the use of these exceptions, to
the extent that they were rarely invoked or applied. Indeed, so strong was the
presumption against their use, that if the Department of Immigration was
confronted with a compelling case for exercise of release powers, it would
commonly seek to avoid their use altogether.[13]
4.19
This was supported by comments from the Immigration Detention Advisory
Group (IDAG) claiming that in the past DIAC and successive detention services
providers had been ‘risk-averse’:
Although this is understandable given the nature of the work
in which they are engaged, we believe that it frequently results in less than
satisfactory outcomes. Underlying this appears to be the feeling that releasing
people from detention into the Australian community creates significant risks
for the community at large.[14]
4.20
Others noted the profound shift from DIAC (and GSL) that was required to
adjust from a focus on security and detention to a risk-based approach with the
onus on justifying a need for detention. As an example of a security focus of
detention, psychologist Guy Coffey recounted the use of handcuffs and other
restraints in taking immigration detainees outside of centres to hospitals,
medical appointments and tribunal hearings.[15] He explained that:
In the early days, people who were profoundly disturbed with
very severe psychotic illnesses, for example, would arrive in handcuffs,
totally disoriented, unable to give any kind of account of themselves. They
would arrive in handcuffs with two or three burly officers. What was going on
there was incredibly inhumane. The overriding preoccupation was one of
security; the person’s psychological needs were very much secondary... It still
has not changed. The legacy is still there but it has been ameliorated
slightly.[16]
4.21
This security focus in the administration of detention is also
demonstrated in the financial penalties that were written into the detention
services provider contracts for escape of detainees. These created an incentive
for a high-security environment in detention centres irrespective of the risk
posed by individual detainees. It is understood that these penalties no longer
feature in detention contracts.
4.22
Others also raised arguments against reliance on internal review given DIAC’s
track record of inconsistent and defective administration of detention
decision-making. RILC also submitted that: ‘The operation of the system has
often been dependent on personalities and informal relationships, and powers
have often been exercised in an often ad hoc and inconsistent manner’.[17]
4.23
In David Manne’s experience:
Often identification of those very fundamental issues which
are central to the question of the deprivation of liberty have only been
resolved through a matter of chance, I would say, in our experience, and that
chance is that someone actually happens to be able to get on to a competent
lawyer who actually looks at the forensics of the situation and says, ‘Hold on,
you should not be in here’. We have personally had this experience a number of
times of actually looking at the person’s actual situation carefully and then
contacting the Department of Immigration and arguing that the person should not
be detained, that they have been unlawfully and wrongfully detained and should
be released immediately. I can also assure the Committee that that has, on
occasion, procured pretty much immediate release of a person. Part of our
experience is that in some ways the system has relied on being able to find by
chance the right person or navigate some sort of complex bureaucratic web to
find someone who will stand up and say, ‘Yes, okay, I will take responsibility
for this’ or ‘I will look into this’, and that to us is a completely
unsatisfactory situation.[18]
4.24
In the public arena there are also enduring issues with DIAC’s corporate
culture and the perception that this would inhibit the full recognition of the
new detention values in the three month review. As a recent article opined:
While alternatives to detention have become
more commonplace recently, [the new] approach will still be discomforting for a
department not known for the quality of its decision making or for adjusting
its procedures to suit individual circumstances’.[19]
4.25
UNHCR guidelines call for the right of a detained asylum seeker to have
the decision subjected to an automatic review before a judicial or
administrative body independent of the detaining authorities. This is followed
by regular periodic reviews of the necessity for the continuation of detention,
which the asylum-seeker or his representative would have the right to attend.[20]
At a public hearing, Richard Towle, the Regional Representative, took a
practical approach to the form of this review and focussed on it having
procedural integrity:
From UNHCR’s perspective, what is important is a clarity of
decision making that is transparent and where reasons are recorded in writing.
If there is to be a review, it has to be an effective review. Whether it is
within the same department by superiors, I think, is a question of quality, but
at the end of the day it needs to be an independent and arms-length review
itself.[21]
4.26
Kate Gauthier of A Just Australia recommended that if DIAC was to
proceed with the three month reviews, that officers should receive appropriate
training:
One of the things I would suggest to the department is that
they… hire somebody who has the expertise in making those kinds of detention
decisions where you have to weigh up security and compliance risks and the
safety of the community versus the inherent right to liberty.[22]
Committee comment
4.27
The Committee commends the resources that DIAC has invested to progress
cultural change in the department. However this Committee, and many other
groups, continue to have some reservations about the capacity of DIAC to effectively
achieve the necessary shift from a risk-averse framework with the presumption
of secure detention, to an assessed-risk framework where the onus is on
establishing the need to detain.
4.28
The Committee also notes that, during 2007-08, in over one quarter of
cases DIAC did not review the decision to detain within the 28 days set out in
the service standards.[23]
4.29
Further, in the past administrative errors in DIAC have resulted in
cases of unlawful detention, and in some instances there errors have continued
for a number of years with serious consequences for those in detention. In
addition, detainees and their advocates continue to express frustration that
information from DIAC regarding case progress is not forthcoming and decisions
to detain appear arbitrary or without clear justification.
4.30
Given this context, it is right for there to be concerns regarding the
integrity of a three month detention review being conducted by and reporting to
the very agency responsible for the initial decision to detain – particularly
when this agency has such a chequered history.
4.31
Consequently the Committee considers it essential that the three month
review report is provided to the person in immigration detention and their
advocate if so authorised by the detainee. It has not been made clear if this
is the intention for the three month review; however the Committee considers this
to be critical to strengthening the effectiveness of the review system and
restoring some level of confidence in DIAC processes.
4.32
In addition, there is as yet little detail about the format or scope of
this review. To ensure the reforms are accompanied by transparency of DIAC
procedures and case progress, the Committee recommends DIAC develop and publish
the template that will be used to conduct the three month review.
4.33
The Committee considers that the Australian public, detainees and their
advocates have the right to know the scope and comprehensiveness of the three month
review, and the publication of the DIAC template will help achieve this.
Recommendation 10 |
4.34
|
The Committee recommends that the Department of Immigration
and Citizenship develop and publish details of the scope of the three month
detention review.
The Committee also recommends that the review is provided to
the person in immigration detention and any other persons they authorise to
receive it, such as their legal representative or advocate.
|
Six month review by the Commonwealth Ombudsman
Current oversight by the Commonwealth Ombudsman
4.35
The Commonwealth Ombudsman’s oversight into immigration matters was
extended by amendment to the Migration Act 1958 (the Act) in 2005.[24]
The Ombudsman now has a critical role in the administrative review of persons
detained under section 189 of the Act. This may include consideration of the
legal, process and administrative factors that impact on the length of time a
person may spend in detention.
4.36
Under the 2005 amendments, the Commonwealth Ombudsman is required to
review the cases of people held in immigration detention for two years or more.
Section 486O (1) of the Migration Act provides that the Ombudsman, upon
receiving a report from DIAC, is to provide the Minister with an assessment of
the appropriateness of the arrangements for the person’s detention. Since the
establishment of this function the Ombudsman has tabled reports on 480
long-term review cases. Some of these referred to the same detainees as their
cases were re-reported to the Ombudsman after six months, as required by
legislation.
4.37
In addition to these reviews, a person may lodge a complaint with the Commonwealth
Ombudsman at any time. For example, in 2007-08, the office received 1528
approaches and complaints about DIAC. Complaints commonly referred to delays in
visa applications, handling of complex cases, Freedom of Information requests
and conditions and alleged assaults in immigration detention centres.[25]
4.38
The Commonwealth Ombudsman can also investigate, on his own initiative
or ‘own motion’, the administrative actions of Australian Government agencies.[26]
The Ombudsman’s own motion investigations into aspects of the administration of
the Migration Act, regulations and procedures have provided an examination of
recurring legal and process issues.[27]
4.39
In his speech of 29 July 2008 the Minister announced that, in addition
to the statutory two year reviews, the Commonwealth Ombudsman would be tasked
with responsibility for an additional mandated review for detention cases at
the earlier interval of six months.[28]
Format of the six month review
4.40
Detail is not yet available regarding the scope and powers of the
Commonwealth Ombudsman in conducting the six month review. It is understood that
DIAC is currently consulting with the Commonwealth Ombudsman as to the exact
nature and format of this review.[29]
4.41
When the Commonwealth Ombudsman spoke to the Committee in September
2008, he outlined his intentions for the six month review process:
Firstly, it will be guided by the same principles as the two year
review—that is, the Ombudsman’s office will conduct an independent review of
the circumstances that relate to a person’s detention. That review will be
based initially on information provided by the department in a report, much as
they provide a report for the two year detention reviews. It will be based on
analysis of departmental files, where that necessity arises, and we will invite
every person who is subject to a six month review to meet personally with a
staff member of my office so that their issues can be discussed. [30]
4.42
The Ombudsman suggested that the reports of the six month reviews would cover
similar issues to the two year detention reports, but would probably be briefer
in order to ensure that the reports could be prepared more quickly. The six month
reports would likely focus more on the specific reasons as to why a person is
in detention, and the steps taken to resolve their immigration status and any continued
need for detention. They would also examine ‘any other issues arising about
the experience of the person in detention—mental health issues and the like’.[31]
4.43
The Ombudsman was supportive of the new review framework and the
opportunity provided for earlier scrutiny of detention cases. He said:
An objective of bringing this independent review process
forward from two years to six months is to ensure that, at a much earlier stage
in the detention process, somebody independently is asking hard questions about
what is being done and what realistically is the prospect for resolving a
person’s immigration status issues; and are all options being considered and
other forms of detention; grant of different visas. One of the concerns we have
had in the past is that issues languished until the two year detention process
cut in. That will be a strong focus.[32]
4.44
In some circumstances, such as when a person had already been released
from detention, the Ombudsman did not intend to conduct a review, unless there
were special issues that warranted being brought to DIAC’s attention.
4.45
All six month Ombudsman reports will be required to be provided to the
Secretary of DIAC, rather than directly to the Minister as is the practice with
the two year reports.[33] In addition, the
Ombudsman indicated that he intended to provide a regular report to the
Minister consolidating his analysis of the cases and issues dealt with over a set
period, such as one month or three months.
4.46
The Ombudsman also indicated that interviews will be conducted with detainees
as part of the six month review. It has not been made clear whether the
Ombudsman is able to provide a copy of the review to the detainee or their
advocate.
4.47
In September when the Ombudsman spoke to the Committee he was not able
to advise if the Minister would table the six month review reports in the
Parliament, or if the reports would be subject to public release. The Ombudsman’s
two year reviews become public documents (with identifying information removed)
and the Minister must table a consolidated version the reviews in Parliament
within 15 sitting days of receiving it.
Effectiveness of the review
4.48
While inquiry participants were positive about the Commonwealth Ombudsman’s
role in the immigration detention field, a number of concerns were raised about
the potential effectiveness of the six month review. Firstly, it was noted by a
large number of individuals and organisations that the Ombudsman’s
recommendations were not enforceable and did not necessarily provide any
protection against ongoing detention by DIAC.[34]
4.49
If the Ombudsman considers there has been a deficiency in the
administrative actions of DIAC, he can recommend that the Department provide a
solution or remedy. These recommendations might include asking them to reconsider
the original decision; give further reasons for a decision; offer an apology; change
a policy or procedure; or review legislation or policy.
4.50
In relation to the two year detention reports, the Ombudsman’s
recommendations might include:
n recommending the
continued detention of the person
n recommending that
another form of detention is more appropriate to the person (such as residing
at a place in accordance with a residence determination), or
n recommending the
release of the person into the community on a visa.[35]
4.51
However, as the Uniting Church of Australia noted, recommendations from
the Commonwealth Ombudsman are not enforceable:
Current legislation does not make the Minister accountable to
the public or to the Parliament for any decision not to follow the Ombudsman's recommendations, making this process ineffective in ensuring the humane treatment of asylum
seekers in detention. [36]
4.52
Additionally, under the Ombudsman Act 1976 the Commonwealth Ombudsman
is not authorised to investigate action taken by a Minister, so it cannot
assess visa decisions made under ministerial discretion.
4.53
DIAC was unable to provide data on the number of incidences that the Minister
did not implement a recommendation of the Commonwealth Ombudsman for a person should
be released into community detention or granted a visa, resulting in that person
remaining in an immigration detention facility.[37]
4.54
The Ombudsman reported that less than half, approximately 45 per cent,
of recommendations made in the two year reports were accepted by the Minister.
Around a further 20 per cent of recommendations were partially accepted or
implemented after the event. This is in contrast to the adoption of
recommendations from the Ombudsman in areas other than immigration:
The disappointing response that we received to the two year
detention reports was contrary to the experience of the Ombudsman in all other
areas, where the general pattern we find is that over 90 per cent of our
recommendations are accepted by departments when they are in individual
reports.[38]
4.55
In relation to the existing two year detention review reports, the
Ombudsman also noted that in around 20 or 30 per cent of cases it was difficult
for his office to assess whether the recommendation had been accepted or not.
This was because the Minister’s response in Parliament did not provide
sufficient information to address the substance of the Ombudsman’s recommendations:
It was a great matter of concern to me that the ministerial
response to the two year detention reports was not as direct and fulsome as, in
my view, the system warranted and people expected.[39]
4.56
However, the Ombudsman did note that he felt there had been some
positive developments in the responsiveness to recommendations. Firstly, he
indicated evidence of more senior-level DIAC engagement with the long-term
detention reports and explained that increasingly senior DIAC officers were
participating in discussions with the Ombudsman’s office about recommendations
made in reports.
4.57
Secondly, the Ombudsman had met with the Minister for Immigration and
Citizenship and individually considered each case of long-term detention. He
explained:
It has been apparent to me that there is a much greater
ministerial focus on those two year detention reports, and I think the
statistics indicate that that senior level and ministerial engagement has, with
other changes, caused a major change in the detention population’.[40]
4.58
In relation to responsiveness to recommendations, the Ombudsman observed
that ‘the Minister’s most recent tabling statement had been significantly more
comprehensive than in the past.[41] However, he also noted
the capacity for greater transparency to keep the Parliament and the people of Australia informed:
We consider that the positive developments and public
accountability could be further enhances by providing for future ministerial
tabling statements to set out for each recommendation made by the Ombudsman,
whether the recommendation has been accepted, rejected or is no longer
applicable. There should be accompanying commentary.[42]
4.59
In addition to the lack of enforceability for the Ombudsman’s
recommendations, there was some criticism regarding the timing of the proposed
review. As the three month review will be internal to DIAC, the six month
review represents the first mandated external review of a person’s detention.
4.60
For some witnesses, although six months was an improvement on two years,
this was an unacceptably long period of time for ongoing detention without
external oversight and enforceable recommendations.[43]
Kate Gauthier of A Just Australia said that:
I would say that reviewing whether or not someone’s detention
is lawful at six months is probably a little too long to wait for that to
happen. I think the Ombudsman should come in a little earlier. On the other hand,
if we have enforceable remedy review, then six months would be okay, but I think
that the Ombudsman should review all cases of detention at that point as a
final check on how the system is going.[44]
4.61
The Ombudsman commented on the timing of the review, saying:
The department has a responsibility from the moment a person
has been detained, and on a continuing basis, to investigate or examine whether
the person’s detention was warranted and whether continuing detention is
warranted… It is a clear legal responsibility on the department and it is
always open to any person, from the moment of detention onwards, to complain to
the Ombudsman and we can do an individual complaint investigation. But in terms
of the Ombudsman doing an independent review that focuses on issues where the
Ombudsman can usefully inform the department, the Minister, the person in
detention and perhaps the general public about the issues, I think six months;
it is sometimes better to wait until issues have crystallised. Many people stay
in detention only for a matter of hours or a matter of days, some weeks. My
initial view is that six months is probably a good time.[45]
4.62
Views were also expressed that it was inappropriate for this review role
to be delegated to the Ombudsman’s office rather than to a judicial or merits
review body. The Castan Centre for Human Rights Law raised concerns about the
proposal to give the role of external scrutiny to the Immigration Ombudsman.
The Centre argued that an Ombudsman should make recommendations on administrative
matters, not adjudicate upon the status of an individual:
This is a matter which is only appropriate for a specialised
judicial or quasi-judicial body. Whilst it may be considered appropriate for
the Ombudsman to have a role in relation to administration of the detention
regime under the Migration Act, it is not appropriate for the Ombudsman to
adjudicate upon the status of an individual.[46]
4.63
The Commonwealth Ombudsman responded to this concern, emphasising that
his office was one element of a system of independent review and scrutiny that
currently applies to DIAC. This system included the courts, tribunals, the
Australian Human Rights Commission and the Immigration Detention Advisory
Group.
We see no need for the creation of any additional scrutiny bodies
or processes… We accept that the role of the Ombudsman is to focus on
administrative matters rather than the legality of decisions… That said, the
Ombudsman frequently comments on legal issues… The focus of our consideration
on legal issues is not statutory interpretation but broader process issues such
as procedural fairness and whether relevant or irrelevant factors have been
taken into account by decision-makers.[47]
Committee comment
4.64
The Committee reiterates the need for transparency in detention review
systems and a culture of ongoing information about detention case progress
towards resolution.
4.65
The Committee also reiterates concerns about the integrity of DIAC
systems and decision making processes in the past and the need for public
accountability in order to restore confidence in DIAC processes.
4.66
The 29 July 2008 announcements set out a review framework with a six month
review conducted by the Commonwealth Ombudsman. The Committee recommends that
the Ombudsman’s report should be required to be provided to the Minister for
Immigration and Citizenship, rather than only to the Secretary of DIAC.
4.67
Further, in line with current procedures for the two year Ombudsman
review, the Committee recommends that a consolidated version of this report be
tabled in Parliament and a comprehensive response be made to each of its
recommendations.
Recommendation 11 |
4.68
|
The Committee recommends that the House of Representatives
and/or the Senate resolve that the Commonwealth Ombudsman’s six month
detention reviews be tabled in Parliament and that the Minister for
Immigration and Citizenship be required to respond within 15 sitting days.
The Minister’s response should address each of the
Commonwealth Ombudsman’s recommendations and provide reasons why that
recommendation is accepted, rejected, or no longer applicable.
|
Giving effect to the reforms
4.69
The Minister for Immigration and Citizenship has said that he expects to
introduce legislation in late 2009 in relation to the announced changes to
immigration detention policy.[48] On 21 October 2008, he told a Senate Estimates Committee that:
The Government’s policy announcements can be implemented by
administrative action, by change to regulations and by legislation. I took the
view, and the Government took the view, that we would not wait to implement
those changes until we had all the legislative framework changed, partly
because of the time delays in drafting and getting it through the Parliament
and, dare I say, the Senate. So what we have sought to do is a phased program,
which means I am implementing administratively or by ministerial decree some
aspects. We are looking to amend regulations for others and then we will need
to bring forward legislation to address a number of fairly fundamental issues.
I would think that would come forward some time next year.[49]
4.70
However there has been some concern that, in the months following the
Minister’s announcements, there is continuing uncertainty from DIAC and amongst
professionals working in the immigration detention field about what the changes
will actually mean and how and when they will be implemented.
4.71
A number of cases have come to the Committee’s attention that suggest the
policy is currently in transition and there is little substantive
implementation (figure 4.1).
4.72
At a Senate Estimates hearing on 21 October 2008, the Minister and DIAC were unable to say whether anyone had been released from detention as a
result of the reforms announced on 29 July 2008. The Minister replied that the measures announced were being ‘progressively implemented… I do not want to
create the impression that on 29 July everything changed’. People had been
released from detention since the announcements, but:
You then have to analyse whether they would have been
released under the new policy or the old policy… What I am saying to you is
that I do not know that you could necessarily say,’ Were they released because
of the change in policy?’[50]
Figure 4.1 Commonwealth Ombudsman’s report on immigration
detainee Mr X
Mr
X is an unlawful non-citizen in detention at Villawood Immigration Detention
Centre. He has been in immigration detention since August 2005, or over three
years. DIAC first applied for travel documents from the Indian Consulate in
January 2006, and is still waiting for these documents before Mr X can be
removed from Australia. The Ombudsman’s individual report from September 2008
on Mr X says that:
‘In Report 399/08 of April 2008, the Ombudsman requested that “the next
report to the Ombudsman under s486N address the consideration given to whether
it is more suitable that Mr X be released into community detention or on a
suitable visa such as a Removal Pending Bridging Visa’. The s 486N report
received by the Ombudsman dated 5 August 2008 does not respond to that request.
In the Minister’s recently announced immigration detention values (July
2008), it is noted that detention in an immigration detention centre (IDC) is
to be for the shortest practicable time unless the person falls within one of
three groups… The s 486 N report from DIAC does not explain which of these
three groups Mr X falls into and it may be that DIAC’s decision to leave Mr X
in an IDC is at odds with the new immigration detention values.
The Ombudsman recommends that the Minister review whether the
continuing detention of Mr X is consistent with the immigration detention
values and if not that Mr X be allowed to live in a community detention
arrangement or be granted an appropriate visa until his immigration status is
resolved.’[51]
The
response to this recommendation in the Minister’s tabling statement was that,
as part of his review of long-term detainees, he had agreed to DIAC continuing
to make arrangements for the removal of Mr X from Australia.[52]
4.73
As of 21 November 2008, there have been three unauthorised boat arrivals
in 2008. On 30 September 2008, a vessel carrying 14 people was
intercepted near Ashmore Islands, 320 kilometres off Australia’s north-west
coast.[53] On 6 October 2008, a vessel carrying 17 people docked alongside a floating production offshore storage
facility in the Timor Sea.[54] On Thursday 20 November,
the Royal Australian Navy rescued a group of 12 people from their sinking boat
80 nautical miles south-east of Ashmore Island.[55]
The passengers on these three boats have been taken to Christmas Island to be
held in detention while they undergo health, security, identity and other
checks to establish their identity and reasons for travelling to Australia.
4.74
The Office of the United Nations High Commissioner on Refugees commented
that:
Unfortunately, from our perspective, the work in progress has
been overtaken by the arrival of two small boats to Christmas Island which will
be subject to these new policy announcements and new procedures while they are
still being considered and put in place. We think that there is obviously a clear
and pressing need to develop guidelines and guidance for those who make
detention decisions so that it is very clear as to the basis on which those
decisions are being taken.[56]
4.75
Some groups have expressed concern that the values have not yet been
accompanied by implementation and discernible change. Anna Saulwick of GetUp!
summed up these views saying it was important ‘to come out with a detailed
legislative and regulatory response that ensures that the spirit of those
reforms is carried through not only into practice now but well into the
future’.[57]
Calls for legislative change
4.76
A great number of inquiry participants urged that the immigration values
announced by the Minister be enshrined in legislation as soon as possible. It
was suggested that the values, hailed as a ‘fundamental shift’ should not be policy
matters governed by the special powers of the Minister or at the discretion of departmental
decision-makers.[58]
4.77
For example, Professor Linda Briskman of the Centre for Human Rights
Education, said that without changes to legislation, the current announcements
were ‘meaningless and precarious’.[59] Kate Gauthier of A Just
Australia also feared that without a legislative basis, the values could too
easily be ignored or upended by a new minister, a new government, or a change
in circumstances, such as an influx of unauthorised arrivals:
All of the changes that happened under the previous
government and are currently happening so far are non-enforceable,
non-reviewable and relatively vague changes that rely on the goodwill of the
department or the minister to behave in certain ways. I do not believe that is
acceptable under our legal systems; what we need is actual legislative change
or the political wind could shift at any moment and we are going to go back to the
conditions that we had of children and various other vulnerable people being
kept in places like Curtin and Woomera.[60]
4.78
Graeme Innes, the Human Rights Commissioner said that:
The policy includes seven broad statements. Our concern is
that we need to see the detail behind those statements. We are not doubting the
direction that the minister wishes to take, but rather needing to see all of
the detail and encouraging that detail to be legislative rather than policy.[61]
4.79
Commissioner Innes said that the way in which the values would be
enforced or guaranteed ‘will be vital to our consideration of whether the new
approach protects fundamental human rights’.[62]
4.80
Witnesses also pointed out that without legislative change,
decision-makers will be seriously compromised by conflict between the presumption
for detention in the Migration Act and the Minister’s instructions that
detention shall be a last resort. The Refugee and Immigration Legal Centre
argued that:
Legislative implementation is not only required as a matter
of international law, but in practice, will be crucial to ensuring that the
worthy aspects of the reforms are properly realised. Detention processes based
on discretion or which are otherwise insufficiently regulated by law -
including those introduced under the post-Palmer reform process - have proved
seriously deficient and highly vulnerable to unaccountable, arbitrary and
fundamentally unfair decision-making.[63]
4.81
Elizabeth Biok of Legal Aid New South Wales argued that if detention was
truly to be the last resort, it was important that legislation was changed to
reflect the new presumption in favour of release.
As it stands at the moment, to say that detention is a matter
of last resort is very vague and very nebulous and it does not give the case
officer or the person who is determining the grounds of detention a clear
guideline. As with bail, we need to have a presumption in favour of release and
the onus is then to be on the department to argue why a person should be kept
in detention.[64]
4.82
Similarly, the Castan Centre for Human Rights Law said that:
The Migration Act contains no guidance as to what justifies
continuing detention. There is no mechanism to decide whether the detention is
reasonable or proportionate, and no requirement that an individual’s particular
circumstances be taken into account.[65]
Committee comment
4.83
The Committee acknowledges that the Minister’s announcement has been
followed by extensive consultation with stakeholders and advocacy groups
working in the immigration detention field. However, the lack of discernible
change in DIAC decisions to detain has resulted in some concern about the
practical and lasting impact of the values now and into the future.
4.84
Codification and legislative reform is important to all stakeholders in
the immigration system, from DIAC to oversight bodies, lawyers and advocates.
DIAC decision-makers, in particular, need clear guidance and processes in
recognition of the principles to underpin detention decision-making.
4.85
The Committee is highly supportive of the announced values and considers
they need to be reflected in Commonwealth law. The Committee agrees that the Migration
Act in its current form does not reflect the spirit nor provide any legal
guidance on the implementation of the Minister’s detention values.
4.86
The Committee considers that legislative change to enshrine these
reforms is vital and should be introduced as a priority. Similarly, development
of the accompanying regulatory changes and appropriate guidelines must be
considered a priority.
Recommendation 12 |
4.87
|
The Committee recommends that, as a priority, the Australian
Government introduce amendments to the Migration Act 1958 to enshrine
in legislation the reforms to immigration detention policy announced by the
Minister for Immigration and Citizenship.
The Committee also recommends that, as a priority, the
Migration Regulations and guidelines are amended to reflect these reforms.
|
Options for merits and judicial review for ongoing detention
4.88
A number of inquiry participants expressed the view that, while the increased
review was encouraging, the proposed reviews at three and six months were
insufficient to bring real integrity to the system. For example, Kate Gauthier of A Just Australia said that:
Those internal steps are great to make the department take
ownership of their own decisions to detain but, like any other form of
detention we have in Australia, you need to have external review with
enforceable remedies, otherwise we still have the system where we have an
extraordinary extension of executive powers being conducted by immigration
officers and immigration officials. As outlined in the Palmer and Comrie
reports, they are being executed with inadequate training and in extraordinary
ways when you compare them to other systems of detention in Australia. That really needs to be rectified.[66]
4.89
Similarly, Anna Saulwick of GetUp! expressed reservations that this
framework would not be considered adequate to address ongoing issues in the
detention processes. She said:
The system of review that is proposed at the moment whereby
on the mainland review is conducted at three months by the department itself
and at six months by the ombudsman and the system of review on Christmas Island
whereby it is conducted by independent professionals, I think was the term that
was used, is not going to satisfy our members in their calls for what they have
called adequate review. I do not think that it is going in the long term in an
absolute sense rectify some of the significant problems that we are confronting
today and that we have an opportunity at this time to be able to address…
4.90
She suggested that judicial review may provide a more enforceable and
independent oversight mechanism:
Perhaps a judicial review is the only way of ensuring
adequate review. That is because, firstly, judicial review is independent,
unlike having the decision maker review their own decision. Secondly, judicial
review bodies, whether they be courts or tribunals, are empowered with
sufficient powers to order people out of detention if they have been wrongfully
detained. Unless you have that power it is formal review only, not substantive
review.[67]
4.91
Most Commonwealth decision-making is subject to judicial review however,[68]
and a decision made under section 189 of the Migration Act is no exception. This is despite the fact that successive
governments have sought to restrict the availability of judicial review for
migration decisions in order to reduce the migration caseloads in the courts
and lengthy delays in case resolution.
4.92
An ‘unlawful non-citizen’ in immigration detention in Australia can challenge the lawfulness of the decision to detain him or her. The
jurisdiction of the Federal Magistrates Court, the Federal Court and the High
Court to examine the legality of the decision made under section 189 of the Act
essentially stems from section 75(v) of the Australian Constitution which
‘entrenches a minimum measure of judicial review’ of Commonwealth
decision-making.[69]
4.93
Section 189 of the Act has been considered by the High Court, which sets
out that as long as the officer had the requisite state of mind, knowledge or
reasonable suspicion that the person was an unlawful non-citizen, detention is required.
That decision, similar to any other form of decision making, is subject to
judicial review.[70]
4.94
However, the United Nations Human Rights Committee draws a distinction
between such review and judicial review of the grounds and circumstances of
detention. It asserts that Australian courts have no power to review any
substantive grounds for the continued detention of an individual and to order
release, in contravention of Article 9 of the International Covenant on Civil
and Political Rights (ICCPR) to which Australia is a party.[71]
4.95
Merits review (available through the Migration Review Tribunal, the
Refugee Review Tribunal and the Administrative Appeals Tribunal) and judicial
review (through the Federal Court and High Court of Australia) generally only
apply to visa decisions, rather than a review of the grounds and circumstances
of a person’s immigration detention.
4.96
Graham Thom of Amnesty International Australia said that:
When it comes to detention, our real issue is that people
cannot challenge the reasons for their detentions in the courts. We think that
is a major failing, that somebody can be born into detention and be kept there
for the rest of their life.[72]
4.97
Although this particular circumstance has never eventuated, and if it
did it is likely that political forces and public opinion would prevail upon
the Minister to use his or her discretion to grant a visa, it is theoretically
possible under law.
4.98
This principle was upheld in Al-Kateb v. Godwin (2004).[73]
In this case, the High Court found that two unsuccessful asylum seekers who
could not be removed to another country could continue to be held in
immigration detention indefinitely.[74]
4.99
Julian Burnside QC of Liberty Victoria told the Committee that:
Mandatory detention of non-citizens without visas is the only
exception in Australia to the general principle that innocent people cannot be
locked up without a rigorous procedure beforehand and judicial oversight at all
times.[75]
4.100
Mr Burnside said that in other circumstances, where society saw fit to
detain a person against their will, there were rigorous systems of checks and
balances. For example, although a person suffering a major mental health
problem could be detained involuntarily:
...the procedure for detaining them is preceded by very
careful checks and they are reviewed every two weeks, at least in the Victorian
system, and they are always subject to judicial oversight.[76]
4.101
This observation was made by a number of inquiry participants who
claimed that Australia’s immigration detention laws deviated from ordinary
principles that generally apply to the treatment of individuals in Australia in our legal system.[77] Kate Gauthier of A Just
Australia said that so many migration issues are:
…completely outside the normal framework of what we would
consider to be a mainstream legal system in Australia, and that is something
that really needs to be looked at when we are looking in a broad picture at the
whole detention and legal framework.[78]
The deprivation of liberty is the most serious infringement
of a person’s rights… however, the immigration detention regime operates
entirely outside of the normal accepted standards of our mainstream legal
system.[79]
4.102
Anna Copeland, of the Southern Communities Advocacy Legal and Education
Services Community Legal Centre in Western Australia, said that, ‘principles of
our own legal system recognise that you cannot take away a person’s liberty
without due process and good reason’.[80] Her colleague Mary Anne Kenny also emphasised the need for independent and enforceable review through the
courts:
Fundamentally, in order to be serious about looking more toward
a model of releasing people into the community, we need to involve some
independent oversight, such as in relation to the involvement of the courts,
because without the courts— without those sorts of checks and balances—people
can languish in detention for a long time and mistakes can occur.[81]
4.103
Kate Gauthier of A Just Australia advanced a proposal to introduce the
opportunity for merits and judicial review through the use of a bridging visa
mechanism for release from immigration detention. The criteria for the bridging
visa would be the criteria for release. In this way, should the department
refuse a bridging visa application, a person in immigration detention would
have access to merits review through the Migration Review Tribunal, who would
reconsider the evidence DIAC used to make its decision. Ms Gauthier suggested:
A very simple way to have both merits review and judicial
review of immigration detention is to have a bridging visa available to
anybody, with the criteria for applying for that bridging visa to be that you
have been in detention for longer than 30 days or whatever the time limit is
that they want to set. Part of the criteria of that, of course, is that a
person has passed their health and character identity checks and appears to be
making a bona fide claim for asylum. By having that bridging visa in existence,
which would be very simple; it is just a change to the regulations, that automatically
confers merits review at the RRT stage or MRT stage, and then judicial review.[82]
Committee comment
4.104
The Committee considered at length the merits of access to judicial
review of the decision to detain under the Migration Act. It is the view of the
Committee that the review framework outlined in this report will bring about a
much improved system of transparency, accountability and essential external
oversight to detention decisions.
4.105
The 29 July 2008 announcements by the Minister indicate a significant
change as, rather than assuming the need for detention, the decision to
continue to detain must be justified against set criteria.
4.106
Through its recommendations the Committee has sought to strengthen this
policy shift by reducing uncertainty and increasing the transparency in
decision making processes. The Committee has also sought to increase the
effectiveness of review mechanisms at the three and six month timeframes
through greater public accountability for these review reports.
4.107
The Committee notes that the framework of criteria set out for
immigration detention aims to reduce the number of persons held in immigration
detention for any length of time and to ensure that periods of detention must
be justified under set criteria. In addition the Committee considers that this
report and other policy changes already announced combine to deliver a robust
and just framework of immigration detention decision making and review that
balances transparency in risk assessments to the Australian community with
compassion for those detained.
4.108
The Committee has recommended the greater use of a new or amended form
of bridging visa to release persons into the community, in line with the announcements
made by the Minister on 29 July 2008. A bridging visa may provide
opportunities for merits review or judicial review of visa decisions. The next
two reports of this Committee will examine alternatives to detention and scope
for the use of bridging visas and associated entitlements for those on bridging
visas.
4.109
The Committee also notes that the review framework concerns the decision
made at three and six months to continue to detain someone. It is anticipated
that the recommendations already set out in this report will enable a larger
number of detainees to be released on a form of bridging visa while their
immigration status is resolved or while awaiting removal.
4.110
However, when these earlier reviews have been completed and a decision
is made to continue to detain, the Committee considers oversight by a judicial
body is warranted and appropriate as an important check on the integrity of the
system.
4.111
The following section considers access to merits and judicial review if detention
is ongoing.
Length of time in detention
4.112
One of the Australian Government’s key immigration values is that
immigration detention is to be used as a mechanism of last resort and for the
shortest possible time. Length of time spent in detention continues to be a concern
for many detainees, oversight bodies and advocacy groups. While there has been
a decrease in the average time spent in detention, there remain a proportion of
cases of long-term detention.
4.113
As at 31 July 2007, the average time spent in detention was 418 days.
This had decreased to 308 days by 30 June 2008, a reduction of 26 per cent over this period.[83] This includes all forms
of detention.
4.114
The number of persons being held in detention longer than 12 months has
also decreased over the last three years. In 2007-08, 258 persons had been in
immigration detention for 12 months or more; this compares with 349 in 2006-07
and 399 in 2005-06.[84]
4.115
As at 31 October 2008, there were 95 people in detention who had
been in detention for 12 months or more, comprising 34 per cent of the
detention population at that time. Forty-three of those people had been in
detention for longer than two years.[85]
4.116
However, prolonged detention of several years continues for some
detainees. DIAC acknowledged that as at 12 September 2008 there was a person who had been detained since 5 January 2001, a period of 2807 days or more than
seven years.[86] Similarly the Law
Institute of Victoria, Liberty Victoria and the Justice Project referred to a
recently removed client who had been in detention in Australia for nine years.[87]
4.117
Further, the Law Institute of Australia, Liberty Victoria and the
Justice Project submitted that the regular review process proposed by the
Minister was ‘insufficient to ensure that persons have a reasonable prospect of
release if legislative provision for indefinite detention remains’.[88]
4.118
Jessie Taylor, of the Immigration Detention Working Group of the Law
Institute of Victoria, also argued that:
Anything that allows the High Court of Australia to find that
an innocent person can be detained for the term of his natural life in
administrative detention needs to be done away with.[89]
4.119
Confirming evidence provided to a great number of other parliamentary
inquiries, official reports, and clinical mental health studies[90],
ex-detainees and people working closely with immigration detainees report that
the indefinite nature of the detention is one of the most difficult and
damaging elements of detention.
4.120
Morteza Poorvadi, who spent four years in Port Hedland, Woomera and
Villawood immigration detention centres, explained:
As an ex-detainee, one of the points that I am very concerned
about is detention—just detention. Detention is necessary for this country. We
understand that. We cannot let anyone in without knowing who they are. I
understand that. But for how long? That is the point. If you tell the
detainees, ‘You’ll be here for one year, and after one year we will decide what
to do with you,’ that is fine. One year is all right. But when I was in
detention I spent four years in there. I saw a detainee who was in there for
eight years. So there was no limit on it. That is one of the worst things:
there is no limit in detention. You sit there every day thinking, ‘Will I be deported tomorrow or the next day?’ … Give people a time limit. Tell them they have
to be there for six months, a year. That is fine. That is reasonable. But more
than that is not reasonable.[91]
4.121
Similarly Ruth Prince, a regular visitor to people in immigration
detention, described the deterioration caused by long-term and indefinite
detention:
The apathy that develops with long-term detention (anything
over two years) is very painful to watch. A very intelligent, educated and
self-assured man who had everything to look forward to has been in detention
for six and a half years. He started with dreams and aspirations of what he
would do here in this 'free' country. As the years passed, he progressed from
wanting to get a visa to wanting to be sent back - but not to three countries
where his life would be in danger. Now, years down the track, he doesn't care what happens to him. “Send me out, send me anywhere, drop me in the ocean, I don't care, as long as it's not here!” He is in a reasonable physical environment, but this
prolonged loss of freedom has completely shattered his self-confidence and
mental stability. When he gets depressed, he doesn't answer his mobile phone,
putting it in a wardrobe. He doesn't eat (he is normally a food-conscious man -
cooking and talking about food is his passion), doesn't drink, and doesn't take care of himself. Such a waste of talent, energy, creativity.[92]
4.122
The Commonwealth Ombudsman has identified a number of factors affecting
the length of detention, drawing on the experience of his Office in conducting
statutory two year detention reviews and a recent review of all long-term
detainees for the Minister. The Ombudsman explained that there may be a number
of reasons why a person has had their immigration detention prolonged or has
not been removed, including:
n ongoing litigation –
depending on the circumstances, an individual may be within their rights to
seek review of an unsuccessful visa application, or a decision to cancel a visa
or a removal decision. A person will typically remain in detention for the
duration of these proceedings
n delays in outcomes
for ministerial requests
n lack of cooperation
on the part of detainee, where a person might refuse to sign a request for
travel documents which may be required to achieve removal from Australia
n inability to obtain
travel documents from the country of origin
n delays in establishing
the identity of a person, and
n administrative drift
or inaction by DIAC, although the Ombudsman had noted an improvement in this
area with more active case management.[93]
4.123
In the Commonwealth Ombudsman’s view, the measures put in place since
2005 and the Minister’s announcements of 29 July 2008 have minimised the chances of long-term and indefinite detention occurring to the same extent as
in the past:
At a practical level, though improvements of that kind have
met many of the objections in principle that have been raised to Australian
immigration law and practice—for example, a common criticism made of the
detention regime is that there is no constitutional or legal barrier to
indefinite detention—in my view, many of the improvements of recent years and
activities in which my own office has been engaged mean that indefinite
detention is unlikely to be a practical problem. I refer here in particular to
our two year detention reports, to our report on section 501 visa cancellations
and to the minister’s promulgation of new immigration detention values.[94]
4.124
However, the Ombudsman also suggests that an additional criterion for
assessing whether a person should be released from immigration detention could
be that no immediate solution to their immigration status is apparent.[95]
4.125
It is unclear what impact the risk-based values and announced criteria
for immigration detention might have on population numbers in immigration
detention and length of time spent in detention.
4.126
The Minister has commented that the values do not reflect a ‘mass
opening of the gates’[96] and that, ‘We will
continue to have a detention population featuring non-citizens who are a risk
to the community or who are refusing to comply with immigration processes’.[97]
However, the Minister also expressed the intention that the values would lead
to less people being held in detention for less time.[98]
4.127
George Masri, Senior Assistant Ombudsman with the Office of the
Commonwealth Ombudsman, noted in September 2008 that:
In the preliminary discussions with the department at the
time the Minister made the announcement, there was a view that, out of the then
detention population of just under 400, a figure of around 75 may be released
applying the detention principles… [But] as we take on the six month detention
review process, we will have a much better understanding of the likely implications
of the application of the new detention principles.[99]
4.128
It was noted by Project Safecom that the announced values to immigration
detention did not preclude indefinite and long-term detention for those who
cannot meet the criteria for release.[100]
Committee comment
4.129
The values outlined by the Minister and the recommendations put forward
in this report will address some factors outlined by the Commonwealth Ombudsman
that are currently impacting on the length of detention and potential case
resolution. This may apply to ongoing litigation, requests for ministerial
intervention and the inability to obtain travel documents, as these processes
can potentially be pursued whilst the person is living in the community, in
line with risk-based approach and the use of detention only as needed.
4.130
The Committee also acknowledges the impact of DIAC’s greater emphasis in
recent years on more active case management and resolution, reducing the
duration of periods in detention, and the Minister’s oversight of reports on
the long-term (2 years and over) caseload.
4.131
Despite these measures, there remain those for whom an identity cannot
be conclusively established and those awaiting the outcome of drawn-out
security checks who could potentially remain in detention indefinitely, even
under the announced values.
4.132
This potential group of long-term detainees may be joined by section 501
detainees should this Committee’s recommendation of individualised risk
assessment approach, made in the previous chapter, not be adopted by the
Australian Government.
4.133
There will also continue to be a number of complex cases, such as for
stateless persons, who typically have experienced long periods in some form of
detention.[101] This may also apply to
persons who are mentally ill or incapable for other reasons of making decisions
about their case and are not able to pursue the options available to them for
release into the community.
4.134
Bearing in mind the significant body of evidence citing the
psychological impact of indefinite and uncertain nature of detention (whether
in a secure detention environment or in community detention), the Committee
considers that a period of detention beyond 12 months is unwarranted, unless a
person is determined to be a significant and ongoing unacceptable risk to the
Australian community.
4.135
For any period beyond 12 months for a person not considered a
significant and ongoing unacceptable risk, the Committee considers that release
from detention onto a bridging visa is an appropriate next measure until their
immigration status is resolved.
4.136
The Committee recognises that release in these circumstances may need to
be accompanied by a set of reporting requirements. However, given the Australian
Government’s stated values that ‘detention that is indefinite or otherwise
arbitrary is not acceptable’[102] and that the onus shall
be against rather than for detention, the Committee considers that stronger
protection against indefinite detention is needed to give full expression to
these values.
4.137
Given the current downward trend in detainee numbers and the reduction
in the average length of time spent in detention as well as the projected
impact of the announced values, it is not envisaged that this initiative would
affect a large number of persons. However, in the context of reforming
immigration detention policy in Australia, adopting a risk-based and humane
approach to detention management, the impacts would be significant.
Recommendation 13 |
4.138
|
The Committee recommends that, provided a person is not
determined to be a significant and ongoing unacceptable risk to the
Australian community, the Australian Government introduce a maximum time
limit of twelve months for a person to remain in immigration detention.
The Committee recommends that, for any person not determined
to be a significant and ongoing unacceptable risk at the expiry of twelve
months in immigration detention, a bridging visa is conferred that will
enable their release into the community.
Where appropriate, release could be granted with reporting
requirements or other conditions, allowing the Department of Immigration and
Citizenship to work towards case resolution.
|
4.139
The Committee has recommended release following a maximum of 12 months
spent in detention, even if the immigration case is unresolved, unless that
person is determined to be a significant and ongoing unacceptable risk to the
Australian community. The Committee intends that, consonant with the severity
of a detention period of 12 months or more, this criterion should be more
rigorous than the ‘unacceptable risk’ criterion discussed earlier in the report
and under which initial mandatory detention may apply.
4.140
It is expected that for the vast majority of cases, the criteria and recommendations
set out here will ensure a maximum time limit for detention and so end the
prolonged and indefinite detention that has characterised policy of the past.
However, the Committee recognises that there may be a very small number of
cases where the ongoing risk of releasing a person into the community is
considered unacceptable. In these instances, a decision may be taken to
continue to detain a person beyond the twelve months pending the resolution of
their immigration status or a change in the material facts giving rise to that
decision. A decision taken in these circumstances is a serious one and the
Committee considered at length issues of justice, fairness and security.
4.141
The Committee also considered at length the value of introducing
additional independent oversight and power to re-examine the decision to
continue to detain a person after a period of time. The Committee noted the
strong evidence received that the lack of merits and judicial review for the
decision to detain has in the past meant that people have been held wrongfully,
unlawfully and for a period of years on the basis of a contested departmental
decision. The Committee has also noted that the only form of external
independent review currently proposed in the new framework is through the
Commonwealth Ombudsman and is an advisory basis only.
4.142
Given the seriousness of a decision to continue detention beyond the
expected maximum of 12 months, the potential impact of lengthy detention on a
person’s mental health, and the legacy of maladministration in this area, the
Committee concludes that there is justification for access to an independent
tribunal and subsequently, if necessary, review by the courts of the tribunal’s
decision.
4.143
Oversight and review by independent judicial bodies will also ensure
that public confidence is restored in Australia’s immigration detention system.
4.144
The Committee considers that, if a decision is made to continue to
detain a person after twelve months because it is determined that they are a
significant and ongoing unacceptable risk to the Australian community, then
that person should have access to merits and process review. Consequently the
Committee recommends that the Migration Act be amended to provide that, if a
person is held in detention after twelve months, then that person has the right
to have the decision reviewed by an independent tribunal and subsequently have
the right to judicial review.
Recommendation 14 |
4.145
|
The Committee recommends that, for any person who after
twelve months in detention is determined to be a significant and ongoing
unacceptable risk to the Australian community, the Australian Government
amend the Migration Act 1958 to give that person the right to have the
decision reviewed by an independent tribunal and subsequently have the right
to judicial review.
|