Dissenting report by Mr Petro Georgiou MP, Senator Dr Alan Eggleston and Senator Sarah Hanson-Young
1.1
As the report indicates, ‘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’.[1]
It is also the case that the lack of merits and judicial review has meant that
many men, women and children have been held not unlawfully but unnecessarily
and unreasonably.
1.2
The Committee majority believe that given factors such as ‘the potential
impact of lengthy detention on a person’s mental health and the legacy of
maladministration… there is justification for access to an independent tribunal
and subsequently, if necessary, review by the courts of the tribunal’s decision’
after a person has been detained for 12 months.[2]
1.3
Under this framework, Department of Immigration and Citizenship officials
will continue to have power to decide whether it is necessary and reasonable to
detain people for 6 months without any external scrutiny of their decision
whatsoever.
1.4
After 6 months, the Ombudsman will review the detention decision but can
offer only advice which is non-binding.
1.5
We strongly disagree that public servants should have such unfettered
power to detain for 12 months without independent external scrutiny which can
ensure the release of people whose detention is assessed as being unnecessary
with respect to the specified criteria.
1.6
If the detention criteria are enshrined in law as the Committee
recommends (Recommendation 12), a detained person should not be denied the
right for 12 months to have a court examine whether the executive’s decision to
detain him or her is in accordance with the law.
1.7
This is a grossly excessive period.
1.8
Evidence presented to the inquiry was that detention can be a very
damaging experience for certain people well before 12 months has elapsed. For
example, psychologists Guy Coffey and Steven Thompson who have had clinical
contact with several hundred detained or formerly detained people advised as
follows:
For some vulnerable asylum seekers, particularly but not
exclusively with histories of torture and trauma or imprisonment, psychological
deterioration has occurred almost immediately. We have observed individuals who
have developed severe levels of depression, anxiety and the activation of
pre-migration related post traumatic reactions very soon after being detained.
Although the number of asylum seekers detained is now much lower than
previously, and they are generally detained for shorter periods, we are still
observing very adverse reactions across the course of the first several months
of detention. The authors and our colleagues have assessed a series of asylum
seekers in the past 6 months who have histories of trauma and loss and who have
deteriorated significantly within a month or two of being detained.[3]
1.9
Clearly it is important that the decision to detain is subject to ‘a
credible system of accountability and review’[4] from an early stage.
1.10
The Committee’s recommendations relating to reviews by DIAC and the Commonwealth
Ombudsman will improve the current framework. However, they fall well short of
ensuring rigorous and timely assessment of whether detention is necessary in accordance
with the new policy.
1.11
Significant weaknesses remain in both the DIAC and Ombudsman’s review
processes, as outlined below.
Internal review by DIAC
1.12
One of the prominent features of the new detention policy announced by
the Minister for Immigration and Citizenship in July is that a senior DIAC
officer is required to review the necessity for detention after people have
been detained for 3 months.
1.13
The majority of the Committee acknowledges that in view of the
‘chequered history’ of DIAC ‘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…’[5]
1.14
The Committee seeks to address these concerns by recommending that:
n DIAC publish the
‘template’ that will be used to conduct the review; and
n the review report be
provided to detainees and their advocates.
1.15
These changes will not alleviate concerns about the integrity of reviews
that are conducted internally.
1.16
The template may be excellent but that will not provide assurance of the
quality of reviews. Providing reports to detainees does not constitute an
effective mechanism of accountability.
1.17
Detainees – who may have little or no English fluency - may not have
qualified and experienced advisors who can assess whether the reviews were
conducted properly and advise on possible courses of action if they are
concerned about the conduct and conclusions of reviews.
1.18
There is no mechanism to ensure that reviews are conducted in a timely
manner, so people do not remain in detention simply because their cases have
not been examined as required by departmental standards. This is not a fanciful
concern: as the report notes, each detention case is currently required to be
reviewed every 28 days by the Detention Review Manager and a Case Manager.
However, in 2007-08 around one quarter of instances of detention were not
reviewed within that period.
Review by the Ombudsman
1.19
The review of cases of people detained for longer than 2 years by the
Ombudsman was instituted in 2005. It has been valuable and undoubtedly led to
the release of people who should not have been detained for extended periods or
perhaps at all.
1.20
Under the new system the Ombudsman has agreed to conduct six month
reviews. This may not ensure expeditious consideration of the situations of
people detained for that length of time. The Ombudsman’s reviews of people
detained for longer than 2 years have commonly taken months to be finalized.
1.21
We support the recommendations that six month review reports should be
tabled and that the Minister should explain why Ombudsman’s recommendations
were accepted or rejected. The impact of these changes may be limited. The
recommendations will still be unenforceable and their influence may be weak:
fewer than half of the recommendations relating to long-term detainees have
been accepted. It remains to be seen whether requiring the Minister to explain
rejections makes acceptance more likely.
Compliance with international human rights obligations
1.22
The Department of Immigration and Citizenship acknowledges that
immigration detention is subject to obligations under international law and
conventions to which Australia is a party, including the International Covenant
on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR).[6]
1.23
The issue of whether Australia’s immigration detention system complies
with these obligations has been the subject of considerable contention for over
a decade.
1.24
When the Minister for Immigration and Citizenship announced the new
immigration detention policy on 29 July 2008, he stated that the values ‘honour
our international treaty obligations’. According to the Minister:
Enormous damage has been done to our international
reputation. On 14 occasions over the last decade, the United Nations Human
Rights Committee made adverse findings against Australia in immigration
detention cases, finding that the detention in those cases violated the
prohibition on arbitrary detention in article 9(1) of the International
Covenant on Civil and Political Rights.[7]
1.25
The specific concern of the UN Human Rights Committee to which the
Minister was referring is that the Migration Act permits non-citizens to be
detained simply if they do not have a valid visa, without reference to whether
it is reasonable to do so because they pose a risk to the community.
1.26
Article 9(4) of the ICCPR also provides that detained people should be
entitled to appeal to the courts to decide whether their detention is ‘lawful.’
This right is available to detainees but the lawfulness of detention is
determined by their citizenship or visa status not whether the detention is
reasonable.[8]
1.27
The consequence is that Australian law does not provide the protection
from arbitrary detention which is an obligation under the ICCPR. As the Human
Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission explained in its submission:
Judicial oversight of all forms of detention is a fundamental
guarantee of freedom and liberty from arbitrariness (ICCPR article 9(4)).
However this right is not guaranteed under the Migration Act in respect of the
right to judicial review of decisions to detain unlawful non-citizens under
s.189. The courts are precluded from authorising the release from detention of
unlawful non-citizens detained under ss 189 and 196 of the Migration Act,
unless their detention under these provisions contravenes domestic law. The
courts have no authority to order that a person be released from immigration
detention on the grounds that the person’s continued detention is arbitrary, in
breach of Article 9(1) of the ICCPR. This is because under Australian law it is
not unlawful to detain a person (or refuse to release a person) in breach of
article 9(1) of the ICCPR.[9]
1.28
We are very doubtful whether denying someone the right to ask a court to
review the merits of their detention for as long as 12 months will honour our
international treaty obligation not to arbitrarily detain people.[10]
Conclusion
1.29
Many submissions strongly argued that the merit of detention decisions
should be subject to independent oversight without indicating a view as to when
that should be available as a right or should occur as a matter of course.
1.30
Their tenor did not suggest that they would have considered it
reasonable to preclude merits and judicial review for 12 months. We do not
agree that such a system will ‘ensure that public confidence is restored in Australia’s immigration detention system’ as the majority of the Committee contend.[11]
1.31
We believe that the government should consider a less draconian approach
that would be far more in accord with the evidence the Committee received and Australia’s human rights obligations. In particular, we recommend that:
n A person who is
detained should be entitled to appeal immediately to a court for an order that
he or she be released because there are no reasonable grounds to
consider that their detention is justified on the criteria specified for
detention.
n A person may not be
detained for a period exceeding 30 days unless on an application by the
Department of Immigration and Citizenship a court makes an order that it is
necessary to detain the person on a specified ground and there are no effective
alternatives to detention. This is consistent with the Minister’s commitment
that under the new system ‘the department will have to justify a decision to
detain – not presume detention’.
Mr Petro Georgiou MP
Senator Dr Alan Eggleston
Senator Sarah Hanson-Young