Dissenting Report by Mr Petro Georgiou MP
1.1
This inquiry was charged with considering alternatives to immigration
detention.
1.2
The first is that the Inquiry took a considerable amount of evidence on
the accommodation of children in alternatives to detention such as immigration
residential housing and immigration transit accommodation.
1.3
That evidence revealed areas of significant concern that are not sufficiently
reflected in the Report.
1.4
The second issue is the lack of transparency of the proposed system of
release from detention via the granting of bridging visas.
Children in Immigration Residential Housing and Immigration Transit
Accommodation
1.5
In 2005 the former government reformed the immigration detention regime to
allow the release of children and their families from detention. The Migration
Act 1958 was amended to stipulate at section 4AA that:
(1) The Parliament affirms as a
principle that a minor shall only be detained as a measure of last resort.
(2) For the purposes of subsection (1),
the reference to a minor being detained does not include a reference to a minor
residing at a place in accordance with a residence determination.
1.6
In July 2005, all children and their families in immigration detention
were released into the community.
1.7
Under the Migration Act, the only exemption to the section 4AA
principle of last resort is residence determinations.
1.8
It is of great concern that the new detention values announced by the
Immigration Minister in July 2008 appear to envisage the detention of children
in immigration residential housing and transit accommodation.
1.9
The new detention values state that “children, including juvenile
foreign fishers and, where possible, their families, will not be detained in an
immigration detention centre” [emphasis added].
1.10
This new value only prohibits the detention of children in immigration
detention centres.
1.11
In unveiling the reforms, Minister Evans said that Labor’s ban on the
detention of children in immigration detention centres would be facilitated by
their release into either community settings or immigration residential
housing.[1]
1.12
The Committee took evidence from a number of organisations concerned
that children were being detained for considerable periods in alternative forms
of detention including residential housing and immigration transit
accommodation.
1.13
In its submission, the Australian Human Rights Commission reported that
it:
…has been aware of several cases where children and families
have been detained in IRH facilities for a significant period of time. … During
2007 inspections of immigration detention facilities, HREOC spoke to a family
with a small child who was detained in IRH for two months before they were
given a Residence Determination. The father told us that he had been concerned
about the effect of the detention on his daughter, who was distressed at being
surrounded by strangers. His wife was also pregnant.[2]
1.14
The Commission’s report on its 2008 visits cited further incidence of
this occurring:
During the Commission’s 2008 visits to the immigration
residential housing facilities, there was a family of five at the Sydney IRH
with a baby and a five-year-old child. The family had been detained for three
months. The parents spoke of the five-year-old child’s confusion and distress
about being detained.[3]
1.15
The International Coalition on Detention of Refugees, Asylum Seekers and
Migrants also raised concerns about ‘long term use of immigration residential housing,
including for families with children and individuals with health issues, where
community-alternatives would have been more appropriate’.[4]
1.16
The Australian Human Rights Commission also expressed its ‘significant
concerns’ about the accommodation of several children in immigration transit
accommodation (ITA).[5]
1.17
It was formerly the Department of Immigration and Citizenship’s (DIAC)
policy that ITA’s was to be used to accommodate low risk detainees for up to
seven days, and was not to be used to detain children and families. But DIAC
has recently informed the Commission that the policy has been amended to allow
detainees to be held at ITA’s for two or three weeks.[6]
DIAC’s response to the Commission’s concerns regarding the detention of
children in an ITA was that the Brisbane and Melbourne ITA’s are ‘suitable for
families with children for short stays’.[7]
1.18
The Castan Centre for Human Rights Law described residential housing as
‘less oppressive than immigration detention centres’ but nonetheless ‘still a
method of detention’:
This is due to the excessive surveillance and restrictions
within them, such as the use of cameras, security guards patrolling the site 24
hours a day; routine headcounts; body searches from children on their way and
returning from school; and the requirement that detainees are not allowed to
leave the grounds unless accompanied by a DIAC officer.[8]
1.19
The Australian Human Rights Commission cautions that ‘The psychological
effects of detention remain a significant concern for people held in immigration
residential housing’.[9] The harm done to children
who have been detained in Australian immigration detention is well documented
and needs no further reiteration here.
1.20
In the course of this inquiry a spokesperson for the Immigration
Department has confirmed that children and their families would now be detained
in immigration residential housing beyond the period of initial assessment.[10]
1.21
During the hearing I put on record that I considered this ‘A breach of
the commitments that were entered into that children and their families would
be put into unsupervised community settings’.[11]
1.22
The evidence received by the Committee that children are being detained
in residential housing and transit accommodation for extended periods is
disturbing. I regard any policy shift in this direction as retrograde and in
potential violation of the international legal principle which is enshrined in
the Migration Act that children may be detained only as a last resort.
Transparency of the bridging visa model
1.23
The report proposes that a reformed bridging visa framework is used in
lieu of community detention to effect release from detention.
1.24
In my joint dissenting report with Senators Dr Alan Eggleston and Sarah
Hanson-Young, we raised grave concerns about the lack of transparency of the
administration of the new risk management system. We said that we strongly
disagreed that public servants should have unfettered power to detain without
independent external scrutiny to ensure the release of people whose detention
is assessed as being unnecessary with respect to the specified criteria.[12]
1.25
While the Committee’s recommendation to shift to a model of release by
bridging visa is a move in the right direction, it fails the transparency test
because the crucial decision of whether to grant a bridging visa is subject to
no independent external judicial scrutiny.
1.26
The Report records that ‘consistently, the evidence reported a lack of
transparency in DIAC decision-making which diminished the rigour of the
immigration system’.[13]
1.27
It also states that ‘the Committee notes that the shift to a risk-based
approach to immigration detention decisions and the greater use of community
based detention alternatives requires that administrative processes become
more accountable and transparent’[emphasis added].[14]
1.28
Yet the report’s recommendations for improving transparency are limited.
1.29
It is unclear what form of ‘review’ of the decision to grant a bridging
visa is being proposed in the Report (Recommendation 4) and, as was said in the
previous dissent, providing “reasons” for decisions to detainees does not
constitute an effective mechanism of accountability.
1.30
The granting of bridging visas is a discretionary power wielded by
compliance officers and bureaucrats. It is guided by a new policy of risk
management which lacks the guarantee of legislative authority.
1.31
In conclusion, I reiterate the recommendation of the last dissenting report
in which a model of release secured by judicial oversight was proposed.
Conclusion
1.32
I reiterate the view of the previous dissent that independent, judicial
review of detention decisions is the only secure mechanism for ensuring the
laudable goal of detention as a last resort is achievable. The previous dissent
recommended 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’.[15]
1.33
In relation to the disturbing tendency to detain children, I say simply
that the detention of children as anything other than a last resort is
repugnant.
1.34
I commend the dissenting report of Senator Hanson-Young for offering
additional ways of improving the current detention regime.
Mr Petro Georgiou MP