Chapter 3 - Secondary assessment of visa applications
3.1
This chapter examines the second stage of Australia's
two tiered system for processing visa applications; that is: where tribunals
undertake merits review of visa and visa related decisions made by DIMIA officials.
It outlines the statutory framework and review processes and canvasses the
concerns raised in respect of that process to date.
The Migration Review Tribunal
3.2
The Migration Review Tribunal (MRT) is a statutory body
which provides a final independent merits review of visa and visa-related
decisions (other than those refusing or cancelling protection visas) made by
the Minister or DIMIA officers acting as the Minister's delegate. Applications
seeking a review of adverse decisions in respect of protection visas are dealt
with by the Refugee Review Tribunal (RRT).
Jurisdiction, membership and powers
3.3
The MRT has been in existence since 1 June 1999. The Migration Act states that the
MRT is to provide a review mechanism that is fair, just, economical, informal
and quick. The Act and the Migration Regulations set out its jurisdiction,
powers and procedures.[235] As mentioned above, the MRT has a very broad
jurisdiction in relation to non-humanitarian visa decisions made within and
outside Australia.
There is a large potential caseload as DIMIA deals with more than 100,000
partner and family visa applications and more than 3 million visitor visa
applications in a year.[236]
3.4
The MRT comprises members appointed for fixed terms
under the Migration Act. At 30 June 2005, the MRT had 67 Members. The MRT is
usually constituted by a single Member when dealing with a case. The MRT cost
$21.1 million to operate in 2004-05.[237]
3.5
The Act and Regulations empower the MRT to undertake
merits review of the cases brought before it. Merits review is an
administrative reconsideration of the case, to ensure that the decision taken
is the 'correct or preferable' one. As the MRT explains in its annual report:
Correct in the sense that the decision made is consistent with
law and policy, and preferable in the sense that, if there is an area of
discretion in making a correct decision, the decision made is the most
appropriate in the circumstances. A merits review system should also improve
the general quality and consistency of decision-making, and enhance openness
and accountability.[238]
3.6
To these ends,
the MRT is authorised to exercise all of the powers and discretions conferred
on the primary decision-maker in addition to its own specific powers. The MRT
can affirm or set aside a decision under review. If the decision is set aside,
the MRT can substitute another decision, or remit the matter to DIMIA to be
reconsidered subject to any directions made by the MRT. The MRT's findings are binding on DIMIA.
3.7
The Act provides that, in reviewing a decision,
the MRT is not bound by technicalities, legal forms or rules of evidence, and
that it must act according to substantive justice and the merits of the case.[239] However, the MRT must make its
decision within the same legislative and policy framework as the primary
decision-maker. In deciding a review, the MRT must apply the correct law, have due
regard to policy and is bound by relevant court decisions. It cannot
make a decision that is not authorised by the Act or Regulations. It is also bound
by any directions issued by the Minister under section 499 of the Act.[240]
3.8
The Act and Regulations prescribe the procedure for
review by the MRT. For example:
-
The MRT cannot accept applications for review
lodged by persons who do not have standing to apply for review. In some cases,
only the visa applicant or former visa holder themselves can apply.
-
The MRT cannot accept and consider an
application lodged outside the relevant time limit prescribed under the Act.
The time limits vary according to the type of visa or decision involved.[241]
-
An application fee of $1400 is payable.[242] The fee may be waived or refunded if
Tribunal officials are satisfied that payment has caused, or is likely to
cause, severe financial hardship. The fee is also refunded if the MRT sets
aside the primary decision or remits a matter to DIMIA for reconsideration.
3.9
The following paragraphs summarise the sequence of
events in the MRT review process.[243]
3.10
On lodgement of a valid application, a case officer
will write to the review applicant confirming its acceptance, allocating a case
number and asking the applicant if they wish to provide any additional
information.
3.11
The MRT will obtain the relevant case file from
DIMIA. The MRT Member will examine the documents provided by DIMIA and by the
applicants. If after reviewing the papers, the MRT considers a mistake has been
made by the DIMIA decision-maker, it may set aside or remit the department's
decisions without holding a hearing.
3.12
If the MRT is unable to make a decision favourable
to the applicant on the papers, the applicant has the right to appear before
the Tribunal to give evidence and argue their case. The applicant will be notified of the time and date of the
hearing and asked if he or she wants any particular persons called as a witness
or written information obtained. The Tribunal is not bound by an applicant's
request that a witnesss be called or written information obtained.
3.13
Hearings are usually open to the public. The MRT
can hold closed hearings if satisfied this would be in the public interest.
3.14
The MRT may hand down its decision at the end of a
hearing or (as is more often the case) after the hearing. All MRT decisions are
written and contain a statement of reasons for the decision. If the review application
is upheld, the file is returned to DIMIA to impliment the decision. Further
processing by DIMIA may be required, such as health and character checks or approval
of assurances of support.
3.15
According to the MRT's latest annual report:
The MRT's procedures are designed to ensure that outcomes are reached
that are consistent with the Tribunal's objective to provide a
mechanism
of review that is 'fair, just, economical, informal and quick'. The Act sets
out procedural steps designed to ensure that an applicant can fully put his or
her case to the MRT, including the opportunity to appear before the MRT.[244]
3.16
The MRT's procedures provide that:
-
an applicant is entitled to have access to, or a
copy of, the material before the Tribunal;
-
the Tribunal must inform the applicant of
information that might lead to an adverse outcome, and give the applicant an
opportunity to comment upon the information;
-
the Tribunal must invite the applicant to appear
before the Tribunal to give oral evidence and present arguments, and to give
the applicant an opportunity to ask the Tribunal to take oral evidence from
other persons or to obtain other documentary evidence;
-
an applicant is entitled to be represented other
than during an appearance before the Tribunal;
-
an applicant is entitled to be accompanied by an
assistant when appearing before the Tribunal;
-
an applicant can make written submissions or
provide documentary evidence at any stage of the review;
-
a qualified interpreter is provided if the
applicant or a witness is not sufficiently proficient in English; and
-
the Tribunal must produce a written record of its
decision and reasons.[245]
Representation
3.17
Appoximately 30% of the MRT annual case load
involves unrepresented applicants.[246]
3.18
The MRT's procedures provide that applicants may be
assisted by representatives, who may forward written submissions and evidence
to the MRT, contact the MRT on the applicant's behalf and accompany the
applicant to any meeting or hearing arranged by the MRT. However, as noted
above, a representative cannot present oral arguments or speak on the applicant's
behalf when the applicant appears before the MRT unless the Tribunal considers
that exceptional circumstances exist.[247]
3.19
An applicant's representative must be a registered
migration agent. The Act generally makes it an offence for a person to provide
immigration assistance (as defined by the Act) unless he or she is
registered as a migration agent under that Act.[248]
3.20
The Minister or DIMIA are not represented in MRT
proceedings. As such, the Tribunal members take an active role in questioining
applicants and witnesses and in exploring issues. DIMIA may make written
submissions to the MRT, but reportedly does so infrequently.[249]
Caseload
3.21
The MRT finalised 8,308 cases during 2004-05. It
also received 7,827 new cases in that year and had 4,685 ongoing cases as at 30
June 2005. 7061 hearings were held in 2004-05, with hearings being held in 69
per cent of all cases finalised. Interpreters were required in 55 per cent of
cases where a hearing was held.[250]
3.22
Table 3.1 provides a breakdown of the cases
finalised by the MRT in the last five years, according to the type and category
of decision and visa involved.
Table
3.1: Cases finalised by the Migration Review Tribunal, last 5 years
Finalisations - type
and category |
2004-05 |
2003-04 |
2002-03 |
2001-02 |
2000-01 |
Visa refusal - Bridging |
799 |
739 |
807 |
733 |
476 |
Visa refusal - Visitor |
379 |
467 |
562 |
532 |
591 |
Visa refusal - Student |
517 |
748 |
583 |
1055 |
1219 |
Visa refusal – Temporary Business |
413 |
794 |
1207 |
998 |
694 |
Visa refusal – Permanent Business |
270 |
251 |
277 |
162 |
143 |
Visa refusal – Skilled |
355 |
424 |
633 |
713 |
328 |
Visa Refusal – Partner |
2840 |
2916 |
2333 |
1636 |
1273 |
Visa Refusal – Family |
614 |
1129 |
1162 |
1366 |
794 |
Cancellation – Student |
1069 |
1237 |
861 |
510 |
313 |
Temporary Business sponsorship |
220 |
438 |
448 |
265 |
211 |
Other |
832 |
879 |
841 |
613 |
537 |
TOTAL |
8308 |
10022 |
9714 |
8583 |
6579 |
Source:
Migration Review Tribunal, Annual Report 2004-2005, p. 20, Table
3.6. Migration Review Tribunal, Annual
Report 2003-2004, p. 23, Table 3.6; Migration Review Tribunal, Annual Report 2002-2003, p. 22, Table
3.7.
Outcomes
3.23
Table 3.2 provides a breakdown of the cases set
aside by the MRT in 2004-05, according to type and category of decision and
visa involved.
3.24
The MRT set aside DIMIA's primary decision in 3905
cases or 47% of all cases finalised. The set-aside rate varied between case categories.
Relevant factors include the applicable criteria for the visa and the extent to
which further evidence may be available.
As the MRT noted in respect of partner visa refusals:
Partner refusals were the decision most often set aside. These also constitute
the largest single group of cases before the MRT. In many partner visa cases
that come to the MRT, the relationship had only existed for a brief period at
the time of the visa application, and at the time of the decision of the
delegate. The relationship may have become more settled by the time of the
MRT's decision, and the MRT is often presented with greater evidence of
co-habitation, of joint financial relationships, of regular contact or visits
between spouses living in different countries, and of the support of relatives
and friends. Such evidence is tested by the taking of oral evidence by the MRT,
with hearings held in more than 80% of cases.[251]
3.25
The overall set-aside rates for 'offshore' cases
was 62%, compared to 39% for 'onshore' cases. The MRT attributed the generally lower set-aside rate in cases
involving a person already in Australia to 'a greater interest in persons on
temporary visas in Australia to exercise review rights, sometimes irrespective
of the merits of their case.'[252]
Table
3.2: Set-aside rates for cases reviewed by the Migration Review Tribunal, last
5 years
Set-aside rates |
2004-05 |
2003-04 |
2002-03 |
2001-02 |
2000-01 |
Visa refusal - Bridging |
22% |
27% |
30% |
35% |
22% |
Visa refusal - Visitor |
58% |
63% |
64% |
61% |
59% |
Visa refusal - Student |
45% |
50% |
48% |
55% |
57% |
Visa refusal – Temporary Business |
28% |
33% |
26% |
25% |
21% |
Visa refusal – Permanent Business |
31% |
38% |
33% |
34% |
34% |
Visa refusal – Skilled |
63% |
59% |
58% |
53% |
43% |
Visa Refusal – Partner |
65% |
61% |
63% |
62% |
59% |
Visa Refusal – Family |
44% |
40% |
35% |
29% |
29% |
Cancellation – Student |
33% |
40% |
31% |
46% |
47% |
Temporary Business sponsorship |
22% |
27% |
21% |
25% |
22% |
Other |
39% |
35% |
33% |
38% |
38% |
All cases |
47% |
46% |
43% |
44% |
43% |
Source: Migration Review Tribunal, Annual Report 2004-2005, p. 22, Table 3.8. Migration Review Tribunal,
Annual Report 2003-2004, p. 25, Table
3.8; Migration Review Tribunal, Annual
Report 2002-2003, p. 17, Table 3.3.
Time taken to determine review applications
3.26
It is apparent that timeliness is an important
performance indicator for the MRT.[253] The MRT's funding is based on the number of
cases to be finalised in each year. According to its latest annual report, the
MRT also 'operates within a legislative framework which requires a speedy
resolution of matters'. Case targets are set for the MRT Members each year and
each Member is expected to undertake a mix of cases (for example, from a
variety of countries). Notwithstanding the importance of meeting case targets,
the MRT has stressed that there is a continuing commitment to making quality
decisions.[254]
3.27
The average time taken by the MRT in 2004-2005 to
process a case (ie, from lodgement to finalisation) was 39 weeks or 271 days.
The MRT explained that:
... the length of a review can vary. This may depend on the type of case,
the investigations or third party assessments that may be required, the overall
workload of the MRT, the priority given to the case, and the extent to which
the applicant request further time to make submissions or to obtain and present
further evidence.[255]
3.28
The MRT must by law give priority to cases
involving persons being held in immigration detention, all visa cancellation
cases and cases involving visits to attend significant family events.[256] For example, the MRT's average
processing time in 2004-05 for review of DIMIA decisions to refuse bridging
visas was 15 days, with 70% of all reviews of bridging visa decisions involving
persons held in immigration detention being finalised within the prescribed
period of seven working days.[257]
Priority is also given to cases which are remitted or returned from a
court for the MRT to reconsider (see below).
Judicial review of MRT decisions
3.29
An application for judicial review was filed in 440
cases of the 8,308 cases finalised by the MRT during 2004-05 (ie, 5.3%).[258]
The vast majority of such applications are withdrawn by the applicant or
dismissed by the courts. Table 3.3 summarises the outcomes of applications for
judicial review of MRT decisions in recent years.
Table
3.3: Outcomes of judicial review of MRT decisions, last 5 years
Judicial Review
outcomes |
2004-05 |
2003-04 |
2002-03 |
2001-02 |
2000-01 |
Applicant withdrawal |
201 |
171 |
142 |
110 |
94 |
Dismissed by the court |
247 |
176 |
108 |
125 |
72 |
Remitted by consent for reconsideration |
65 |
38 |
17 |
50 |
62 |
Remitted by court for reconsideration |
27 |
25 |
12 |
14 |
12 |
TOTAL |
540 |
410 |
279 |
299 |
240 |
Source:
Migration Review Tribunal, Annual Report 2004-2005, p. 24, Table
3.10. Migration Review Tribunal, Annual
Report 2003-2004, p. 28, Table 3.10; Migration Review Tribunal, Annual Report 2002-2003, p.18, Table 3.4.
The Refugee Review Tribunal
99.1
The Refugee Review Tribunal (RRT) is a statutory body
whose main function is to provide a final independent merits review of
decisions made by DIMIA or its Minister to refuse or cancel protection visas to
non-citizens in Australia.
Jurisdiction, membership and powers
3.30
The RRT was established in 1993 and its jurisdiction,
powers and procedures are set out in the Act and Regulations.[259] As mentioned above, the RRT deals
only with applications from 'onshore' asylum seekers, that is, persons who are
present in Australia and who have
been refused a protection visa or had such a visa cancelled.
3.31
The RRT is comprised of members appointed for fixed terms under to the
Migration Act. As at 30 June 2005, the RRT had a Membership of 74,
comprising the Principal Member, Deputy Principal Member, 4 Senior Members, 10
full-time Members and 56 part-time Members. The RRT is usually constituted by a single
Member when dealing with a particular case.[260]
3.32
According to the RRT, its Members:
... come from a broad range of professions and are employed for
the high level skills which they bring to the decision making process. Members
have a wide range of tertiary qualifications and more than 50% have a legal
background. Many Members come to the Tribunal with extensive experience at
senior levels in the private and/or public sectors in a variety of
organisations, including other Tribunals. Some Members have experience in the
refugee field, refugee advocacy groups or the UNHCR. A number of Members have
undertaken temporary assignments with the UNHCR ... to assist in the
establishment of human rights structures and to make refugee determinations in
those countries.[261]
3.33
The RRT cost $21.08 million to operate in 2004-05.[262]
3.34
The RRT undertakes a full merits review. It can affirm DIMIA's primary
decision, vary that decision, set the decision aside and substitute a new
decision, or remit (return) the matter to DIMIA for reconsideration with
directions.
3.35
In making its decision, the Tribunal is restricted to
consideration of whether the 'inclusion' criteria for refugee protection as set
out at Article 1A of the 1951 UN Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees
(the Refugee Convention) are met.[263] It
has no jurisdiction to consider whether the individual is excluded from
Convention coverage and, therefore, is not owed protection on character related
grounds set out in the Refugee Convention.[264]
3.36
The RRT has described its conduct of review
applications as follows:
In conducting a review of a decision to refuse to grant a protection
visa, the RRT looks at the issues and evidence afresh. It considers the
material relating to the protection visa application, including DIMIA's file,
any further submissions from the applicant and information from other sources
available to the RRT. It decides whether the applicant is a person to whom
Australia has protection obligations, which includes consideration of whether
he or she is a 'refugee' within the meaning of the Refugees Convention.[265]
3.37
A major objective of the Tribunal – in common
with the MRT – is to provide a review system that is ‘fair, just, informal,
economical and quick’. As the RRT explains:
The proceedings before the RRT are informal (non-adversarial).
Applicants may attend the RRT to present oral arguments and to give oral
evidence, but DIMIA is not usually represented at RRT hearings. The RRT is
inquisitorial in nature and can obtain whatever information it considers
necessary to conduct the review. It is not bound by technicalities, legal forms
or the rules of evidence but must act according to substantial justice and the
merits of the case. It cannot, however, make a decision outside what is
permitted by the legislation.[266]
3.38
The Migration Act and its Regulations specify
how an application for review by the RRT must be made and when and by whom. The following
paragraphs summarise the current sequence of events in the RRT review process. Commentators
have noted that procedures and practice are constantly evolving and changing,
with legislative changes to the RRT's structure and processes and changes in
its mode of operation on a policy and practice level.[267]
3.39
At present, applications must be made on the prescribed
form. The completed form must lodged within a specified time which commences on
the date that a person is notified or deemed to be notified of a primary
decision.[268] The RRT does not have
the power to extend the time limit. The time limits are:
-
7 working days for persons in immigration
detention, and
-
28 calendar days for all other cases.
3.40
There is no upfront application fee. However, a
charge of $1,400 is payable if the application for review is unsuccessful.
3.41
On receipt of a valid application, the RRT sends a
letter of confirmation and invites the applicant to send any documents,
information or any other evidence that they want the Tribunal to consider.
3.42
Once the RRT has
received the application, it conducts a ‘review of the papers’. The RRT will
review the DIMIA case file and any statement made by DIMIA in relation to the
case, material provided with the application and any statutory declarations
made by the applicant in relation to the matter under review, and any
additional information sought by the RRT. At this point, the RRT may make a
decision favourable to the applicant based on a ‘review of the papers’.
3.43
The RRT may
invite the applicant or any other person to provide additional information
relevant to the review. If the RRT considers that it has information before it
which would give it a reason to affirm the orginal decision (ie, adverse
information), the RRT must provide the particulars of that information to the
applicant and invite the applicant to comment on it. The RRT is only obliged to
provide the applicant with adverse information specific to the applicant or
some other person (as opposed to information concerning a class of persons).[269]
3.44
The RRT may
request additional information at any stage of the review. A detainee invited
to provide additional information to the RRT, other than for the purposes of an
interview, has seven days notification of the invitation to provide the
information if information is to be provided from a place in Australia, or 28
days after the date of notification if information is to be provided from a
place outside of Australia.[270] An applicant who is not in detention has 14
days to provide additional information, other than for an interview, after
notification (if information is to be provided from a place in Australia) or 28
days after notification (if information is to be provided from a place outside
Australia).
3.45
The RRT may
extend the period within which the applicant must provide additional
information or comment on information, to 28 days for information to be
provided from within Australia and to 70 days for information to be provided from
outside Australia, from the date of notification.
3.46
All written
material submitted by an applicant in a language other than English must be
accompanied by a translation into English by an accredited translator. The RRT
will meet the cost of translation in limited cases where the document is
material to the applicant's case and no other alternative can be found within a
reasonable timeframe.[271]
3.47
If an applicant
declines to provide additional information or to comment on information
provided by the RRT to the applicant pursuant to section 424 of the Migration
Act, the RRT may make a decision on the review without taking further action to
obtain the applicant’s view on the information or to obtain additional
information from the applicant.
3.48
If the RRT’s
decision would not be a favourable one for the applicant based on a ‘review of
the papers’, the applicant must be invited to appear before the RRT, unless the
applicant consents to the RRT deciding the review without the applicant
appearing.
3.49
A detainee who is
invited to appear before the RRT is given seven days notice, and an applicant,
who is not a detainee, is given 14 days notice to appear before the RRT. The
applicant must also be advised that, within seven days of notification of the
invitation to appear before the RRT, he or she may request in writing that the
RRT take oral evidence from a person or persons.[272] However, the RRT is not required to
obtain evidence from the named person(s).
3.50
If the applicant
declines an invitation to appear before the RRT pursuant to section 425 of the
Migration Act, the RRT may make a decision on the review without taking further
action to enable the applicant to appear before it. However, the RRT may
reschedule the interview date to enable the applicant to appear before it.
3.51
The RRT will
engage a qualified interpreter if satisfied that the applicant needs an
interpreter for a hearing. Where possible, the RRT will use interpreters who
have been accredited by the National Accreditation Authority for Translators
and Interpreters (NAATI).
3.52
The RRT may
request the applicant to provide additional information or comment on
information at an interview. A detainee
must provide the information or make comments within 14 days of notification.
An applicant who is not a detainee must provide the information or make
comments within 28 days of notification.
3.53
The RRT may
extend the period within which the applicant must provide additional
information or comment on information at an interview to 28 days of the
applicant receiving notification of the extension.
3.54
The RRT's hearings are private and confidential. In
view of the nature and subject matter of asylum claims, the Tribunal is
required by the Migration Act to conduct its hearings in private and to
restrict the release of personal information.
The Committee notes that breach of these requirements by Tribunal
Members and officials is a criminal offence punishable by a term of
imprisonment.[273]
3.55
The RRT's hearing are also informal.[274] Commentators have noted that the
general procedure and method of conducting a hearing can vary greatly depending
on the presiding Member.[275] The RRT
may take oral evidence from an applicant in person, by telephone,
closed-circuit television or any other means of communication.[276] Hearings are tape-recorded and the
tape-recording is the official record of the proceedings. An audio-cassette
tape of the proceedings will be made available to the applicant upon request.
3.56
The RRT has the power to summon a person to appear before
it to give evidence or to produce documents to it.
3.57
A person appearing before the RRT to give evidence is
not entitled to be represented by any other person or to cross examine any
other person giving evidence unless the Tribunal gives them leave to do so.
However, an applicant is entitled to give evidence and present arguments in
support of their claims.[277]
3.58
The RRT is required to prepare a written statement of
its decision on the review including the reasons for the decision, findings on
any material questions of fact, and references to the evidence or other
information on which the findings of fact were based.[278] A copy is provided to the applicant
and to DIMIA.
3.59
The RRT must also publish decisions considered to be of
particular interest, excluding information capable of identifying the applicant
or his or her dependents or relatives. Approximately 10% of RRT decisions are
published.[279]
Representation
3.60
Approximately 31 per cent of the 3,033 cases finalised by
the RRT in 2004-05 involved unrepresented applicants.[280]
3.61
The RRT's procedures provide that applicants may appoint
a representative, who can forward written submissions and evidence to the RRT,
contact the RRT on the applicant's behalf and accompany the applicant to any
meeting or hearing arranged by the RRT. The Tribunal is not required to
allow the representative to argue the case for the applicant. The applicant must
appear at any hearing in person or via teleconference or videoconference
facilities. The RRT may invite the applicant's representative or adviser to
give make oral submissions at the conclusion of the hearing or in writing after
the hearing.[281]
3.62
With very limited exceptions, an applicant's representative must be a
registered migration agent.
3.63
DIMIA is not represented before the RRT, but may make
written submissions to the RRT in individual cases or in relation to a
particular caseload.[282]
Caseload
3.64
The RRT finalised 3,033 cases in 2004-05 and had 1,115
cases on hand as at 30 June 2005.
3.65
Applicants appointed a representative in 69 per cent of
cases finalised in 2004-05. Applicants were invited to a hearing in 95 per cent
of the finalised cases. Hearings were held in 73 per cent of finalised cases
and interpreters were used in 89 per cent of cases involving a hearing.[283]
3.66
The RRT received 2,911 new applications for review in
2004-05. The number of applications lodged has declined over the past four
years (that is, from 4,929 in 2001-02). The RRT explained:
Over this period, the volume of lodgements has been affected not
only by changes in primary lodgements and primary decision and primary grant
rates (affected by circumstances overseas, departmental processing priorities
and border control policies). It has also been affected by the processing of
applications for further protection visas from persons who have previously been
granted a temporary protection visa, and changes in the volume of court
remittals. ... Border control policies have largely stopped the flow of applications
for protection visa applications lodged by persons who did not enter Australia
lawfully. Detention cases peaked at 16% of lodgements in 2000-01, but only
comprised 7% of lodgements in 2004-05. Most lodgements (93% in 2004-2005) are
community cases, where the protection visa application was made after lawful
arrival on another kind of visa, and the applicant holds a bridging or other
visa providing lawful status during the course of the review.[284]
3.67
The RRT received 196 applications during 2004-05 from
persons being held in immigration detention. It finalised 166 of these cases in
that year, with 53 being undecided as at 30 June 2005.[285]
3.68
The composition of the RRT's caseload also changed
during 2004-05. There was a marked rise in the number of Iraqi cases. The RRT
explained that almost all of these involved TPV holders seeking a further
protection visa. This rise was offset by a significant decline in applications
received from other source countries such as Afghanistan,
India, Malaysia
and Indonesia.[286]
3.69
Table 3.4 shows the composition of cases lodged, by
source country, which shows the changing nature of the RRT's caseload.
Table 3.4: Cases lodged with the Refugee Review Tribunal, by source
country
Cases lodged by
source country |
2004-05 |
2003-04 |
2002-03 |
Afghanistan |
299 |
747 |
25 |
Bangladesh |
137 |
105 |
154 |
China (PRC) |
753 |
649 |
909 |
India |
128 |
404 |
523 |
Indonesia |
68 |
143 |
411 |
Iraq |
540 |
6 |
18 |
Lebanon |
50 |
48 |
111 |
Malaysia |
88 |
142 |
163 |
Philippines |
58 |
48 |
41 |
Sri Lanka |
72 |
90 |
145 |
Other |
718 |
962 |
2377 |
All cases |
2911 |
3344 |
4877 |
Source: Refugee Review Tribunal, Annual
Report 2004-2005, p.17, Table 3.4
Outcomes
3.70
The RRT set aside DIMIA's decision in 1,009 cases or 33
per cent of all cases finalised in 2004-05. The RRT explained:
Typically a decision under review is set aside if a Member if
satisfied that the applicant is a person to whom Australia
has protection obligations under the Refugee Convention. The application for
the visa is at this point usually remitted (returned) to DIMIA for further processing
and final decision. The RRT's finding that an applicant is owed protection is
binding on DIMIA.[287]
3.71
The set-aside rate in 2004-05 for applications lodged
by persons held in immigration detention was 31 per cent – that is, 52 of the
166 detention applications finalised by RRT were upheld. The set aside rate for
detention cases in the two previous years was approximately 20 per cent.[288]
3.72
There was a significant increase in the RRT's overall set
aside rate in 2004-05. As mentioned above, the RRT's set aside rate in
2004-2005 was 33 per cent. The set aside rate for previous years varied between
10 per cent and 13 per cent. This increase in the number of DIMIA decisions
being overturned was explained by the RRT as follows:
This reflected a significantly increased proportion of cases
from Afghanistan
and Iraq in the
caseload. Most of these cases involved persons who had previously been granted
a temporary protection visa and who were seeking a further protection visa. In
the majority of these cases, the Tribunal found that at the time of the review
the circumstances in Afghanistan
and Iraq were
such that a further protection visa should be granted.[289]
3.73
Table 3.5 provides a summary of the outcomes of RRT
review applications.
Table 3.5: Outcome of review applications to the Refugee Review
Tribunal
Outcomes of reviews |
2004-05 |
2003-04 |
2002-03 |
2001-02 |
2000-01 |
Primary decision affirmed |
1899 (22%) |
4685 (81%) |
5388 (86%) |
4647 (79%) |
4858 (81%) |
Primary decision set aside |
1009 (33%) |
739 (13%) |
359 (13%) |
710 (12%) |
620 (10%) |
Application withdrawn |
72 (2%) |
299 (5%) |
426 (7%) |
377 (7%) |
310 (5%) |
Otherwise resolved # |
53 (2%) |
87 (1%) |
78 (1%) |
131 (2%) |
177 (3%) |
Total finalised |
3033 |
5810 |
6251 |
5865 |
5965 |
Source: Refugee Review Tribunal, Annual
Report 2004-2005, p. 19, Table 3.7; Refugee Review Tribunal, Annual Report 2003-2004, p. 22, Table
3.7; Refugee Review Tribunal, Annual
Report 2002-2003, p. 18, Table 3.2.
# (includes
applications lodged outside of the required time limit)
3.74
Table 3.6 provides the RRT set-aside rate according to
source country.
Table 3.6: RRT set-aside rates by source country
Set aside rates by
source country |
2004-05 |
2003-04 |
2002-03 |
2001-02 |
2000-01 |
Afghanistan |
89.2% |
89.8% |
32.2% |
61.6% |
61.9% |
Bangladesh |
14.9% |
14.4% |
1.5% |
1.9% |
- |
China (PRC) |
10.4% |
4.7% |
3.4% |
6.4% |
- |
India |
1.5% |
0.4% |
0.5% |
0.7% |
- |
Indonesia |
5.4% |
3.7% |
0.9% |
2.6% |
- |
Iraq |
91.5% |
20% |
52% |
- |
87.1% |
Lebanon |
18.6% |
9.9% |
10.6% |
- |
- |
Malaysia |
1.0% |
0.6% |
0.7% |
1.8% |
- |
Philippines |
1.9% |
0% |
0.2% |
- |
- |
Sri Lanka |
15.5% |
5.9% |
4.2% |
15.4% |
- |
Other |
11.6% |
5.5% |
4.8% |
- |
- |
All cases |
33.3% |
12.7% |
5.7% |
12.1% |
13.0% |
Source: Statistics for
all countries listed in the Table were not readily available for 2001-02 and
2000-01. Refugee Review Tribunal, Annual Report 2004-2005,
p. 20, Table 3.8; Refugee Review Tribunal, Annual Report 2003-2004,
p. 23, Table 3.8; Refugee Review Tribunal, Annual Report 2002-2003,
p. 19, Table 3.3; Refugee Review Tribunal, Annual Report 2001-2002,
p. 3.
Time taken to determine review
applications
3.75
Timeliness is also an important performance indicator for the RRT.[290]
Like the MRT, the RRT's funding is based on the number of cases to be
finalised in each year. According to its latest annual report, the RRT also
'operates within a legislative framework which requires a speedy resolution of
matters'. Case targets are also set for the RRT Members each year and each Member
is expected to undertake a mix of cases (for example, from a variety of
countries). The RRT has stressed that, notwithstanding the importance of
meeting case targets, there is a continuing commitment to making quality
decisions.[291]
3.76
The Migration and Ombudsman
Legislation Amendment Act 2005 requires the RRT to finalise reviews within 90
days. The RRT has advised that measures have been developed or mooted to
achieve this outcome since the proposed amendments were first announced by the
Prime Minister on 17 June 2005.[292]
3.77
The average time taken by the RRT in 2004-05 to process
a review application from lodgement to finalisation was 22 weeks (154 days). This
is the lowest average processing time since the RRT was established in 1993. The
average time taken to finalise applications from persons held in immigration
detention was 11 weeks.[293]
Judicial review – appeals to the
Federal Court
3.78
During 2004-05, 1,978 applications for judicial review
of RRT decisions were made. These related to 1,932 RRT decisions. This compares
to 2,824 initiating applications for judicial review filed in the previous
year, relating to 2,791 RRT decisions.[294]
3.79
An application for judicial review was filed in 39.9
per cent of all cases finalised by the RRT in 2004-05. This compares to 38.1
per cent of cases finalised in the previous year.[295]
3.80
The number of RRT decisions remitted or overturned by
the courts rose from 163 cases in 2003-04 to 245 cases in 2004-05.
3.81
Table 3.7 provides a summary of the outcomes of applications
for judicial review of RRT decisions in the last five years.
Table
3.7: Outcomes of applications for judicial review of RRT decisions
Judicial Review
outcomes |
2004-05 |
2003-04 |
2002-03 |
2001-02 |
2000-01 |
Applicant withdrawn |
675 |
519 |
288 |
194 |
341 |
Dismissed by the court |
1288 |
1539 |
444 |
365 |
342 |
Remitted by consent for reconsideration |
165 |
80 |
34 |
76 |
105 |
Remitted by court for reconsideration |
80 |
83 |
31 |
53 |
47 |
TOTAL |
2208 |
2221 |
797 |
686 |
835 |
Source: Refugee Review
Tribunal, Annual Report 2004-2005, p.
22, Table 3.10. Refugee Review Tribunal, Annual
Report 2003-2004, p. 25, Table 3.10; Refugee Review Tribunal, Annual Report 2002-2003, p. 20, Table
3.4.
3.82
The judicial review process is discussed below.
The Administrative Appeals Tribunal
3.83
The Administrative Appeals Tribunal (AAT) is an
independent statutory body established to undertake merits review of a broad
range of administrative decisions made by Commonwealth Government Ministers and
officials.
Jurisdiction
3.84
The Administrative Appeals Tribunal has jurisdiction to
review the following departmental decisions on their merits:
-
refusal to grant a protection visa or to cancel
a protection visa relying on Articles 1F, 32 or 33 of the Refugee Convention; [296]
-
cancellation of a business visa;
-
an order for the deportation of a non-citizen
convicted of certain crimes;
-
registration, or refusal to register, a person
as a migration agent;
-
deregistration, or refusal to deregister, a
person as a migration agent;
-
cancellation or suspension of a person's
registration as a migration agent;
-
refusal to grant, or to cancel, a visa on the
basis that the non-citizen does not satisfy the delegate of the Minister that
the person passes the character test;
-
access to information (that is, decisions made
under the Freedom of Information Act 1982
(Cth)); and
-
review of certain decisions made under the Australian Citizenship Act 1948 (Cth).[297]
The Migration
Act also provides for the referral of certain RRT and MRT decisions to the AAT
for review. In each case, the decision may be referred by the Principal Member
of the Tribunal, and must involve an important principle or an issue of general
application.
Caseload
3.85
Applications to the AAT have generally increased over
the past 10 years. There were 72 matters resolved in the AAT in 1993-94. There were
399 in 2004-05.[298]
3.86
Immigration related applications for review lodged with
the AAT during 2004-05 included:
-
Business Visa cancellations – 123 applications
lodged;
-
expedited review of section 501 visa
cancellations / refusals – 98 applications lodged;
-
protection visa cancellations / refusals – 5 applications
lodged; and
-
section 501 visa cancellations / refusals – 70
applications lodged.[299]
Outcomes
3.87
The following table summarises the outcomes of
migration related applications in recent years.
Table 3.8: Outcomes of migration-related applications
Year |
Applicant
Withdrawal |
Minister
Withdrawal |
Decision under Review Set Aside |
Decision under Review Affirmed |
Total |
2000-01 |
77 |
31 |
66 |
146 |
320 |
2001-02 |
98 |
80 |
78 |
95 |
351 |
2002-03 |
97 |
46 |
86 |
170 |
399 |
2003-04 |
164 |
89 |
124 |
197 |
574 |
2004-05 |
118 |
97 |
71 |
175 |
461 |
Source: The table is drawn from DIMIA Fact Sheet 9, Litigation Involving Migration Decisions,
25 October 2005.
Criticism of secondary assessment procedures
3.2
The Committee received evidence critical of the review
process following DIMIA's rejection of visa applications, particularly in
respect of protection visa applications. Much of this criticism mirrored the criticism
levelled at the primary assessment stage of visa applications (which is
described in Chapter 2). Concerns raised in submissions included:
-
the need to comply with strict time limits when
seeking a review;
-
the time taken to process applications;
-
the imposition of application and transcript
fees;
-
restriction on legal representation at hearings;
-
the quality of interpreters used;
-
the attitude of tribunal members towards
applicants;
-
the quality of decision making; and
-
scepticism about the impartiality and independence
of tribunal members.
Concerns raised in earlier
inquiries
3.3
Similar concerns were raised with this committee in its
2000 inquiry into Australia's
Refugee and Humanitarian Program.[300] That report summarised the concerns raised
about the RRT at that time as including:
...the structure and operation of the Refugee Review Tribunal
including the adequacy of the inquisitorial approach of the RRT; the training
and qualifications of Members; the manner in which interviews are conducted,
including the use of credibility issues by the RRT members to challenge
applications; the manner in which country information is used by Members; the
alleged bias of some RRT Members; and the use of single-member panels.[301]
3.4
The committee at that time considered that these
concerns could best be addressed by improving decision-making at the primary
stage, providing better advice, assistance and information to protective visa applicants
as well as clarity about the RRT's methodology, and enabling the RRT to hear
some cases with a larger panel of members.[302]
The committee's response to concerns or perceptions about the independence of
the RRT and the qualifications and training of its Members was to recommend that:
-
the Principal Member of the RRT be a person with
judicial experience;
-
officers from DFAT, DIMIA and the Attorney-Generals
Department not be appointed as RRT members;
-
members of the RRT be drawn from a broad
cross-section of the Australian community, including the legal profession, with
experience in refugee and humanitarian issues;
-
further training be provided for RRT members in
the use of inquistitorial methods; and
-
the RRT be able to sit as a multimember panel in
appropriate cases.[303]
3.5
In response to concerns that the measures used to
assess the RRT's performance were inadequate, the committee recommended that
DIMIA and DOFA acknowledge the RRT's changing caseload and the differing
complexity of its cases and use this information 'to assess appropriate funding
levels and/or systems'.[304]
3.6
The Government responded to these recommendations in
2001 by either dismissing them or stating that they were already reflected in
current practice. The Government also advised that multimember panels were not
permitted under the Migration Act at that time.[305]
Concerns raised in this inquiry
Arbitrary and inflexible time
limits
3.7
There are strict time limits for lodging applications
for review to both the MRT and the RRT. Neither tribunal has the power to
extend the time limits. In relation to the MRT the time limits vary from two
working days for some immigration detention cases, through to seven working
days for cancellation decisions and other immigration detention cases, 21
calendar days for other cases where the visa applicant is in Australia, and 70
calendar days for cases where the visa applicant is outside Australia.[306]
3.8
As mentioned above, the time limits for the RRT are 7
working days for persons in immigration detention, and 28 calendar days for all
other cases.[307]
3.9
Submitters criticised the inflexibility of these time
limits for preventing access to merits review regardless of the reasons for
failing to lodge within time or the consequences for the applicant.[308] The Law Society of South Australia
(LSSA), for example, pointed to the consequences of such a failure for
applicants. It argued that a failure to lodge within the prescribed time:
...flows on to affect applications made directly to the
Minister. Under the Migration Act, the Minister only has the power to exercise her
discretion to substitute a more favourable decision after the RRT or MRT has
made a decision. If applicants fail to
lodge an application for merits review within time, they also lose the right to
appeal to the Minister. ... there are many reasons an applicant may not receive
notice and/or lodge an appeal within time.
These include lack of access to legal advice, failure to understand the
requirement to provide a current address (particularly for applicants with
limited English language skills, education and/or understanding of the
Australian legal system), or error on the part of the appointed agent. If DIMIA is in error, the onus is on the
applicant to prove the error in order for the notification to be re-issued,
which can be very difficult.
Precluding such applicants from applying for an extension of
time for appeal is unreasonably harsh.
The MRT, RRT and federal courts should be granted the discretion to
allow extensions of time in appropriate circumstances.[309]
3.10
It was argued that tribunals should have a discretion
to grant an extension of time to lodge an application for review in appropriate
circumstances similar to that provided to the courts via the Migration Litigation Reform Act 2005 (Cth).
The latter provides a discretion to grant a possible extension of a further 56
days after the 28 day period from actual notification.[310]
DIMIA's delays in processing FOI
applications
3.11
It was put to the committee that the impact of inflexible
Tribunal time limits was compounded by the time taken by DIMIA to process
related Freedom of Information (FOI) applications.
3.12
The Law Institute of Victoria (LIV) suggested that
extensive delays are not uncommon in FOI applications for DIMIA files:
Such delays in processing and reviewing FOI requests is unworkable
when migration law and visa applications require responses within prescribed
periods (ie usually within 28 days) without access to extensions of time.
Obtaining access to a client’s DIMIA file is imperative for a migration agent
to provide correct immigration assistance to their client. This is particularly
relevant in matters involving an applicant who does not speak English and does
not understand what has occurred in their case.[311]
3.13
The LSSA also raised this issue with the committee:
The Freedom of Information
Act 1982 (Cth) requires that DIMIA or the Minister must take all reasonable
steps to enable the applicant to be notified of a decision on a request within
30 days. However, applications for access to documents held by DIMIA typically
take many months to process. Current applications commonly take from 6 months
to a year before a decision is made. This in turn impedes the application for
and processing of visa applications. It prevents lawyers and migration agents
from giving speedy advice, and in some cases, from assisting with an
application at all, until the documents are made available. DIMIA should direct
appropriate resources to ensuring that such unreasonable delays do not occur.[312]
3.14
A related concern was DIMIA's claimed reliance on
exceptions under FOI legislation to deny access to information. As the LIV
explained:
The release of documents under FOI is usually made with
exceptions, for example, on public interest grounds. For example, an offshore
application such as a spouse visa may be refused due to local community
information, an anonymous allegation received or negative information provided
by an unknown source or obtained independently by DIMIA. Similarly in visa
cancellation cases, an FOI request will not always reveal all information on a
DIMIA file and why a visa has been refused. Such information, unless disclosed
to the applicant, can make it difficult, if not impossible, for the applicant
to respond to and or correct. The principles of natural justice mean that a
person who is the subject of an allegation and whose interests are affected by
a decision must be accorded procedural fairness in the investigation of public
interest disclosures and given the opportunity to be heard.[313]
3.15
The LIV claimed that, in cases where DIMIA invoked
exceptions under the FOI legislation, the matter is practically closed as the
means of challenging such decisions generally involves further lengthy delays.[314]
3.16
The committee notes that a key finding of the Palmer Inquiry
into the Cornelia Rau
matter was the unduly restrictive interpretation of privacy laws by DIMIA.[315]
3.17
DIMIA explained to the Committee that the number and
complexity of FOI requests had increased significantly in recent years, with
DIMIA now receiving more FOI requests than any other agency. It stressed that,
notwithstanding the latter, it endeavours to process and finalise each FOI
request within the statutory timeframes and that is implementing a range of
strategies to address delays in FOI processing including structural changes,
recruitment of additional staff and investigating alternative ways to meet the
increasing demands.[316]
Time taken by trubunals to process review applications
3.18
Concerns were raised over delays being experienced at the review stage. The LIV, for example, suggested
that:
[while] resources,
caseload and the individual circumstances of some cases may cause delay in a
visa application decision, ... DIMIA, MRT and RRT should be required to comply
with strict visa decision making time periods unless certain exceptions apply.[317]
Tribunal application and transcript
fees
3.19
As noted above, a person whose protection visa
application has been refused is advised that they can seek a review of the
decision by the RRT. At the same time they are advised that an application fee of
$1400 is payable if their application is unsuccessful.
3.20
It was put to
the committee that:
...'the use of application
fees and charges is used by DIMIA and other related agencies to deter asylum
seekers making a review application. Such fees limit an asylum seeker's access
to justice and right to seek review of a decision by DIMIA to refuse their
Protection visa application.[318]
3.21
The LIV considered payment of these fees, or the
prospect of having to pay these fees if unsuccessful, placed an unnecessary
burden upon asylum seekers and their supporters. It referred the Committee to the failure by
DIMIA and the RRT to make clear to recent East Timorese asylum seekers, who had
filed RRT applications and who were later granted humanitarian visas by the
Minister exercising her discretion, that they were entitled to seek a refund of
the review application fee. The payment of the fee, it was claimed, had not
only caused many families financial hardship but also forced a number to borrow
money to pay the fee.[319] The LIV recommended
that the review application fee should be either reduced or abolished.
3.22
Similar concerns
were raised in respect of transcription fees. For example, the Refugee Advocacy
Service of South Australia noted that, when advising asylum seekers on
potential appeals of RRT decisions, the fees charged for Tribunal transcripts
forced the Service to rely on tapes of the Tribunal hearings and the services
of volunteers to transcribe those tapes. However, it noted that, in
non-immigration matters, transcript fees are usually waived in relation to
legal aid matters. They submitted that 'transcript fees should be waived and
copies of transcripts of RRT hearings provided free of charge to those making
applications or lodging appeals.'[320]
Restrictions on legal
representation
3.23
As with the primary assessment of protection visa
applications, criticism was levelled at the restrictions on legal
representation at hearings, particularly RRT hearings.
3.24
As explained above, there is no automatic right to
representation and no right to call witnesses or to cross-examine witnesses at tribunal
hearings. Effective legal representation at a hearing depends on the discretion
of the tribunal. A migration agent or lawyer can only speak or make submissions
on an applicant's behalf if and when the tribunal member considers it
appropriate to do so. It was put to the committee that such a lack of legal
support increases the vulnerability of persons who often speak little English,
may have mental problems as a result of being held in detention and have no
understanding of the legal system in Australia.[321]
3.25
As the International Commission of Jurists (ICJ) noted
Refugee law in Australia
has become an extraordinarily complicated area of specialised legal skill, as
the Courts have construed the migration legislation and international law
through many appeals of tribunal and departmental decisions. The complexity of
refugee law, which many lawyers find difficult to grasp, let alone asylum
seekers, renders even more unsatisfactory the provisions of the Migration Act
that prohibit legal representation in the review tribunals.[322]
3.26
The difficulties faced by unrepresented applicants were
a particular concern. As noted above, approximately 30 per cent of RRT and MRT
cases involve an unrepresented applicant. The LSSA advised the committee that
it has:
... concerns about evidence that is put before the RRT as well in
that often the applicant is not represented and they will be presented with
certain evidence by the tribunal member which, it is put to them, is contrary
to their claim, and asked to respond to it pretty much on the spot. Often you
have a scenario where it is one piece of evidence versus another. We say that
it is actually quite unfair for that unrepresented applicant to have to try to
deal with information when they may be completely unaware of where it has come
from. How is an unrepresented, untrained applicant who probably does not even
speak English very well supposed to put their case forward in a way that they
are actually able to test the information that is being put against them? That
is probably one of the really serious problems that comes with having people
unrepresented before the RRT.[323]
3.27
As noted above, this committee in its June 2004 Report
on Legal aid and access to justice,
recommended the Commonwealth legal aid guidelines be amended to provide for
assistance in migration matters, both at the preliminary and review stages,
subject to applicants satisfying means and merit tests, and that necessary
funding be provided to meet the need for such services.[324] It is apparent that neither
recommendation has been implemented.
Quality and appropriateness of
interpreters
3.28
Both the MRT and the RRT will arrange for an
interpreter to assist an applicant at a hearing, if required. However, as
previously noted, criticism has been levelled at the quality of interpreters
used as well as the appropriateness of certain interpreters, because of their cultural
and ethnic background. Similar claims and concerns to those were raised in
respect of the use of interpreters during the primary assessment of
applications were levelled at the use of interpreters by the Tribunals. The
RASSA, for example, referred to the following in relation to the RRT:
... [p]roblems with interpreters which are often apparent once
tapes of the hearing are listened to and the transcript reviewed. These occur where interpreters do not have
adequate fluency in the English language or in pronunciation. At times there may be ethnic conflicts
between the interpreter and the applicant.[325]
Conduct and attitudes of Tribunal
Members
3.29
It was claimed that a lack of procedural protections
for applicants coupled with a confrontational attitude by some members, particularly
on issues of credibility, had undermined tribunal decision-making.
3.30
The discretionary nature of RRT hearings was highlighted
by submitters such as A Just Australia:
Evidentiary practices
and procedures at the RRT have been observed to be 'operating at such a
routinely low standard that they contribute to decisions that are manifestly
unfair and potentially wrong in law.' The
conduct of hearings is entirely discretionary, meaning:
- there may be pre-hearing contact between the Member
and the applicant, but there usually is not;
- the applicant may be able to bring a friend along for
emotional support (an issue that is particularly relevant for traumatised
people with a negative experience of the authorities in their country of
origin);
- the Member may lead the applicant through their story
chronologically or may instead focus only on one or two issues arising from
their DIMIA file; and
- the Member may (selectively) use whichever country
information they believe is relevant in assessing whether or not an applicant’s
story is credible – information which the applicant does not have access to,
and which is of varying quality.[326]
3.31
As noted above, there is also no automatic right to
representation before the Tribunals and no right to call witnesses or to cross-examine
witnesses at hearings, with legal representation at a hearing depending on the
discretion of the Tribunal.
3.32
The committee's attention was drawn to the following
judicial summary of the nature of the review provided by the RRT.
[H]earings before the Tribunal are virtually unique in
Australian procedures and in the common law system generally. ... The Tribunal is
both judge and interrogator, is at liberty to conduct the interview in any way
it wishes, without order, predictability, or consistency of subject matter, and
may use any outside material it wishes without giving the person being interrogated
the opportunity of reading and understanding the material before being
questioning about it ... These methods contravene every basic safeguard
established by our inherited system of law for 400 years.[327]
3.33
It was argued that the lack of procedural safeguards
was being compounded by the attitude and approach taken by some Tribunal
Members. The RASSA, for example, cited the following conduct as evidence of poor
decision making by the RRT:
- Very leading, directed or selective questioning
by the RRT member which appears not designed to elicit the applicant’s story
but rather to find a reason for rejecting their claim.
- RRT members not addressing their mind to the key
question as to whether this person is a refugee but spending an inordinate
amount of time in trying 'to catch them out'.
- Applicants being placed under stressful
questioning and required to respond on the spot without any opportunity to
consider issues raised and provide further submissions.
- Applicants not being given a proper opportunity
to simply tell their story.
- The RRT member often places great emphasis on
so-called 'inconsistencies' in submissions. Sometimes assumptions as to credibility are made on the basis of
inconsistencies without taking into account the fact that applicants may be
under stress and may be being questioned about issues that took place several
years ago where they may not have a good memory recall.
- RRT members often making assumptions or putting
words in the mouth of an applicant, making erroneous conclusions and not
necessarily asking for clarification of conclusions.
- RRT members 'brushing off' issues raised by the
applicant, or saying they will come back to those issues and then not doing so.
- RRT members raising spurious reasons as to why
an applicant should leave Australia and return to their former country.
Examples include questions such as – if the applicant had bribed their way out
of their home country, then why couldn’t they bribe people to live there
safely, or asking why they simply couldn’t keep a low profile in their own
country. Each of these questions of course implies that the RRT member accepts
that the person cannot live freely and safely in their own country, and yet
often the applicant is still rejected.
- Obvious failures of the RRT to acknowledge the
genuine refugee claims of certain groups of people, eg. Sabain Mandaeans, Arab
Iranians and Christian converts, who more recently have been recognised as
persecuted groups.[328]
3.34
Similar comments were expressed by other submitters and
witnesses.[329] The International Commission
of Jurists (ICJ), for example, raised particular concerns in respect of the use
of adverse information, including information from unidentified sources. It
advised the Committee that:
One gets a distinct sense, in the RRT in particular, that the
entire proceeding really takes the form of cross-examination of the asylum
seeker. ... There are no real rules of
admissibility of evidence. If the tribunal regards it as relevant to its
inquiry, it is admissible. Certainly it is open to the tribunal to determine
what weight to give to certain evidence, but often an applicant who has given
their evidence under oath in person before the tribunal is confronted with
information from unidentified sources which would seem to contradict an aspect
of the person’s evidence. Yet the witness who provides either information or an
opinion is often not identified. Their expertise or their qualifications to
express an opinion are not disclosed.[330]
3.35
ICJ representatives also argued that applicants may be
unable to rebut or examine adverse information in any meaningful way:
If there is information before the tribunal that the tribunal
regards as a reason or part of a reason to affirm the department’s refusal then
they are required [by section 424A of the Migration Act] to issue a letter
under that section to the applicant disclosing the information, explaining why
it is relevant and inviting them to respond. But what happens ... is that you are
not given the actual documents. You are not given the exchange of
correspondence that may have given rise to this information. You are not given
full texts of documents. As a lawyer in a court, if someone seizes upon a
paragraph of a document to defeat my case, I would ordinarily look at the
document as a whole to ascertain the proper context and see if there was anything
else in the remainder of the document which may rebut or perhaps qualify to
some extent the interpretation that has been given to the extract. That in my
view is proper natural justice – the proper right to reply to adverse
information. But the tribunal is ... not
obliged to give you that document or that evidence. It can just paraphrase it
in a letter or provide it to you under section 424A, saying, ‘We have
information that suggests X’, where that conclusion may not even be what is in
the piece of information. So you do not have an opportunity to examine the
reasoning process that led to the statement that that information means that
conclusion.[331]
3.36
The import of the above is that such information can be
used to reject an applicant's claim on the basis of a lack of credibility:
It is often used as a basis on which to conclude, as a finding
of fact, that its weight outweighs the sworn testimony of the person and that
their credibility is doubtful. Therefore their whole claims fails and that is
it. Credibility is a finding of fact in relation to which there is no access to
judicial review, so that is particularly problematic.[332]
Approach to assessment of credibility
3.37
The issue of the RRT's assessment of an applicant's credibility
continued to be a vexed one for many submitters and witnesses. As explained in Chapter
2, assessment of credibility is intrinsic to the determination of refugee
status.
3.38
The ICJ argued that the RRT and MRT have developed a
fixation on the question of credibility of visa
applicants, and many cases are now rejected on the basis of adverse findings of
fact in this regard. It stressed that these findings are usually made after
vigorous cross-examination of applicants:
Standard cross-examination techniques are employed by Members at
the hearings in relation to visa applicants, and much like in court
proceedings, witnesses can become confused or upset when faced with co-ordinated, strategised and direct challenges to
various aspects of their case, including their credibility. Usually, this all
takes place in a language other than their own, and through the use of
interpreters of mixed competence.[333]
3.39
The outcome – according to the ICJ – was that:
In many cases, adverse credibility findings are made as a result
of relatively minor inconsistencies in an applicant’s evidence. It is hardly
surprising that in many cases (if not most of them), there will be some
inconsistencies or lack of precision in some of the evidence before the
tribunals. This is particularly so in refugee matters where many applicants have
limited education and for whom presenting a complicated refugee case would be a
formidable task, even if it were in their own language.[334]
3.40
It was argued that the lack of an effective right to
representation before the Tribunals only compounded the problem:
Due to the very nature of the RRT and the MRT, and the lack of
the right to representation, the hearings before the RRT and MRT often take the
form of cross-examination by the Member of the witnesses (including the visa
applicant), and very little more. There is no right for the visa applicant to
have a lawyer or other representative undertake re-examination, and if the
Tribunal identifies other witnesses and sources of information, there is no
entitlement to test that adverse evidence through the applicant’s cross-examination
of those other witnesses. Their hearsay statements, often only in writing, are
admitted without any real challenge or testing, and they are often preferred to
the applicant’s own evidence.[335]
3.41
The Asylum Seekers Resource Centre (ASRC) echoed the
ICJ's concerns. It advised the Committee that:
... it is our view that RRT members regularly question applicants
in an inappropriate manner and often draw unfair and unjustified conclusions on
matters of credibility.[336]
3.42
The ASRC pointed to the significant number of
submissions to the 2000 inquiry and to the many suggestions made to the RRT
over the years concerning the RRT's inappropriate approaches to credibility. It
argued that, despite the latter, the RRT's approach to credibility remained
just as problematic:
With the exception of the mantra of ‘ongoing training for RRT
members’ we are not aware of any substantive attempts to deal with the issue.[337]
3.43
A particular concern was the RRT's approach to and
treatment of applicants who had suffered torture or trauma:
Assessment of psychological reports from torture/trauma
counselling services in relation to an applicant’s history of past persecution
presents apparent difficulties for the RRT. Little weight is generally given to
such reports by RRT members. However members are often limited in their
expertise and their ability to fairly and accurately make findings on the
credibility of persons who are victims of torture/trauma.[338]
3.44
The ASRC made the following suggestions for change:
-
The RRT incorporate into its Practice Direction Specific
guidelines on its approach to credibility (as is the case in Canada).
-
The use of use multi-member panels.
-
Further training for RRT members on making
decisions in a way which minimises the need to rely on credibility.
-
The RRT give greater weight to expert medical
reports such as those from doctors, psychologists, psychiatrists or specialist
torture/trauma counsellors detailing a claimant’s history of persecution with a
clinical assessment of their current psychological condition.
-
A summit be held specifically on the issue of
credibility in the refugee determination process, with the aim of identifying
recommendations for change.[339]
Performance management
3.45
Concerns were raised that the measures used to assess
the performance of the Tribunals compromised their independence and decision-making.
3.46
It was put to the Committee, for example, that a
government focus on the cost of the determination system rather than its
effectiveness had fostered poor decision-making by the RRT. A Just Australia
argued that:
... the focus on performance indicators, a set number of cases
members are expected to finalise per year, as a away of measuring the
performance of Tribunal members also contributes to this [poor
decision-making]. 'Efficiency' becomes an end in itself rather than an aid to
effective and fair decision-making. The RRT's credibility would be greatly
enhanced, and its decisions greatly improved, if it had ... a greater focus on
the quality, rather than the quantity, of decisions made by members.[340]
3.47
Performance measurement was also an issue that arose in
this committee's inquiry in 2000, with witnesses in that inquiry also arguing
that the RRT Members' decision quotas affected the quality of decision-making.
Such concerns prompted the committee to recommend that the workload of RRT
Members be re-assessed.[341]
3.48
The Committee understands that annual case targets in
2004-05 for full time RRT Members were 115 or 120 cases or at least 2.2 cases
per week. Members averaged 94 per cent of their case targets in that year.[342]
3.49
Commentators have suggested that the Tribunal Member's
task is a challenging one and can result in pressure to cut corners:
Review of protection visa applications involves reading the
DIMIA file and documents provided by the applicant for the review as well as
research into the applicant's home country and particular issues raised by
their claims, The Member will have to decide whether they need to obtain
further information or extend an invitation to comment on adverse information,
Once that process is complete, the Member must decide whether a favourable
decision can be made 'on the papers'. In most cases, it cannot and a hearing
invitation must be extended. The Member must prepare questions for the hearing,
conduct the hearing – almost invariably through an interpreter – and then write
up their decision. The Tribunal is assisted by country and legal research
sections, both of which have a considerable database of information at their
disposal. Tribunal Members are required to type up their own decisions and the
ability to use a word processor is one of the selection criteria for
appointment. The Member's task is a formidable one and it is not surprising
that the SLCLC [the Senate Legal and Constitutional Legislation Committee]
recommended that the workload of RRT Members be reassessed. It is also not
surprising that the pressure of this workload may cause Members to cut corners
or fail to cover all the issues in the reasons for their decisions.[343]
3.50
As noted above, both the MRT and RRT also rely on the level
and outcomes of appeals against their decisions as measure of their
performance. A Just Australia pointed to an 'exponential' increase in the
number of court appeals lodged against RRT decisions in recent years as
evidence of poor Tribunal decision making:
Despite repeated attempts by the Federal Government to prevent
appeals to the courts from the RRT, the number of applications for judicial
review of RRT decisions has risen consistently since the Tribunal commenced
operations, climbing from 52 in the 1993-1994 financial year to 914 in
2000-2001, and 2824 in 2003-2004. This climb does not simply reflect an
increase in asylum seekers. Rather applications for judicial review as a percentage of Tribunal decisions have
risen. Applications were lodged for judicial review of 3% of RRT decisions in
1993-1994 ... [whereas] in 2003-2004, applications for judicial review were made
in respect of 35% of all RRT decisions.[344]
3.51
A Just Australia maintained that this increase:
... cannot simply be
explained away by asserting that those appealing decisions are acting in bad
faith. The increase in appeals has corresponded with multiple attempts by the
government to prevent any such appeals by progressively tightening the
provisions of the Migration
Act. Repeated amendment of
the Act, combined with intense government pressure on Tribunal members to
privilege efficiency over fairness has created a situation where the
legislation is so complex, and the Tribunal system under so much strain, that
users of the system widely believe it to be incapable of making consistent
decisions.[345]
Independence
3.1
Several submissions expressed doubts about the
independence of the Tribunals, with some calling for their abolition.[346]
3.52
The joint submission from the Human Rights Council of
Australia and A Just Australia, suggested that the Minister:
....exerts an unhealthy influence over what was meant to be an
independent review mechanism. This influence rests partly in the combination of
her powers of appointment to the RRT, the short tenure of these appointments,
and the fact that single-member panels mean it is possible for the Minister to
more easily identify or pressure individuals whose decisions go consistently
against the department. ... In addition, the failure of key selection criteria
for members to include legal or human rights expertise raises doubts about the
emphasis these issues are given in the making of life and death decisions for
asylum seekers.[347]
3.53
These concerns were shared by the ICJ:
A number of tribunal Members are employed on maximum term contracts,
but are eligible for re-appointment at the Minister’s discretion. It is not
satisfactory in terms of the independence of the review tribunals that the
Minister who determines appointment and re-appointment of tribunal Members, is
also the Minister responsible for administering DIMIA, whose decisions are
under review by the tribunal. It is a classic example of a structure whereby
the purportedly independent tribunals could be subjected to powerful political
pressure from the Minister whose departmental delegates are being called into
question in the review cases. It is reasonable to fear that review tribunal
Members may feel indirect, if not direct, pressure to provide decisions that
please the Minister, and which could not be seen to be contrary to government
policy. ... Further, concerns about the independence of the review tribunals are
reinforced when one notes that many tribunal Members are ex-DIMIA officers,
promoted by the Minister through the ranks of the public service. Further, if a
visa applicant takes the tribunal and the Minster to court over a tribunal
decision, the tribunals engage the same lawyer as the Minister to represent
both parties in the proceedings.[348]
3.54
This concern was echoed by A Just Australia, which
argued:
...as the RRT has the same Minister as DIMIA (whose decisions it
reviews), it is extraordinarily vulnerable to political pressures in decision-making.
This is particularly so given the political prominence of asylum issues, and
the extremely vocal championing of the Department's decisions by both Philip
Ruddock and Amanda
Vanstone.[349]
3.55
Mr Julian
Burnside QC was also critical of the RRT. He
advised the committee that:
...there is a real problem with the nature, structure and
operation of the RRT,...They are not independent of government – although
notionally they are, in reality they are not because they are on short-term
contracts and they are given a very clear message about what outcomes the
government wants. ... A more workable system might be one where, first of all,
the members of the RRT are given some sort of independence. They should not be
on short-term contracts; they should be given the sort of independence that is
commensurate with the importance of the decisions they are making.[350]
3.56
RASSA noted that there have been reports suggesting that
'Tribunal members those members whose decisions please the Government have a
greater chance of being reappointed'.[351]
An over reliance on ministerial
discretion
3.57
It was put to the Committee that the lack of confidence
in decision making at the primary and secondary assessment stage had led to an
over reliance on the use ministerial discretions. A Just Australia noted that:
... the frequency with which the Minister is required to intervene
to overturn decisions of the RRT is also of concern. The Department’s figures
reveal that of the 2049 visas granted as part of the onshore humanitarian
program, 1259 (over 60%) were the result of decisions by the Minister (DIMIA
2005). ... Obviously, 60% of total onshore humanitarian program extends well
beyond anomalous cases and might suggest that at the stage of the RRT, ...
genuine asylum claims are not being recognised.[352]
3.58
The UJA and ASPHM also suggested that a lack of
confidence in decision-making by DIMIA and the RRT:
... has resulted in ministerial discretion being over-emphasised
by asylum seekers and their supporters in the determination process. Though
substitution of a more favourable decision by the Minister does not imply a
wrong decision by the RRT, nor that the person granted a visa is considered to
be a Convention refugee, many protection claimants and their supporters equate
ministerial intervention under section 417 with a grant of refugee status to
the person, and with an implied failing of the RRT to make the right decision.
Increasingly, public perception is that the power is used to grant visas to
refugees where Australia's
onshore protection program has failed them.[353]
3.59
As Chapter 4 explains, the current system of
ministerial discretions is not without criticism.
Alternative approaches
3.60
Witnesses and submitters offered a range of
alternatives which, in their view, would improve the independence and integrity
of Tribunal decision making processes.
3.61
RASSA, for example, argued that the RRT Members:
... should be lawyers. They should have tenure or in the
alternative be restricted to one fixed term of appointment with no right of
renewal. In other words, there should be no perception that Tribunal members
are relying on the Government's favour for continuing employment.[354]
3.62
Some have argued for longer terms of appointment, transparent
selection processes and the imposition of a presumption of reappointment unless
the relevant selection panel can provide cogent reasons for non-appointment.[355]
3.63
Others, such as the ICJ, called for the abolition or
substantial modification of the Tribunals. The ICJ advised the Committee that
its position was:
... that the MRT and the RRT should either be abolished (with the
case load and jurisdiction being transferred to the AAT) or they should be
modified such that their structure and procedures, and access to judicial
review, are the same as is presently applicable to cases in the AAT. Members of
the tribunals should only be appointed by the Attorney-General, and there
should be no temporary appointments following which there is any eligibility
for re-appointment as a Member.[356]
3.64
The ICJ maintained that the tribunals' current
structure and procedures meant that one cannot have confidence in their ability
to impartially, independently and effectively determine the facts of a case:
Only through a right to representation, the right to question
witnesses against them, and through judicial officers who are not potentially
subjected to Ministerial political pressure, can any confidence in the outcome
of these tribunals be had. Given the gravity of the decisions being made by
these tribunals, which very often have life-changing implications for the
applicant (and in refugee cases, potentially life-threatening implication) the
present structure and procedures are inadequate and inappropriate.[357]
3.65
Others recommended the use of multi-member RRT panels as
a way of improving the decision making of the RRT and reducing the perception
of government influence.[358] According
to the NSW Legal Aid Commission, reasons for considering use of multi-member
tribunals included:
... the sheer complexity of refugee law, the difficult experiences
that applicants invariably bring before the tribunal and the inevitable sense
of pressure that the members feel in terms of deciding, in many cases,
somebody’s future – their life. We feel that multimember tribunals, two-member
or three-member tribunals, sometimes may spread that pressure around and allow
for a fairer and more comprehensive assessment of a person’s claim.[359]
3.66
The Committee notes that the earlier finding that a
panel approach to RRT hearings 'would ... help ensure the continual dissemination
of information and reasons behind decisions within the RRT itself' and that it
'would expect the panel structure to contribute to a continuous improvement in
the quality of decision-making by the RRT.'[360]
As mentioned above, the latter prompted the Committee's recommendation in 2000 that 'the RRT be able to sit as a single
member body and as a panel of two and up to three members as appropriately
determined by a Senior, or the Principal Member.'[361]
The RRT's response
3.67
The Committee put the above concerns to the RRT and
DIMIA.
3.68
Their advice was that a broad range of quality control
mechanisms exists to ensure that merits review decision making quality in the
portfolio remains at a high level. These include:
-
Tribunal Members being recruited for high level
of skills and experience through a competitive and extensive nation-wide
recruitment process;[362]
-
Priority being given to the training and
professional development of Tribunal Members, with a formal training program involving
induction and follow up training of Members as well as leadership, guidance and
advice by mentors, legal advisers and Senior Members.
-
Reliance on specialist legal and country
research staff and ready access to a very wide range of legal and relevant
country information.
-
Procedural requirements to ensure fairness and
justice.
-
The existence of a Member Code of Conduct and a
requirement to act according to the Australian Public Service (APS) Values and
APS Code of Conduct.
-
Active performance management of Members.
-
The availability of a formal complaints
mechanism (although only a small number of complaints are received).
-
Appropriate professional development and
training are also conducted at the National Members Conference.[363]
3.69
In response to concerns over consistency in decision
making, the RRT stressed that each cases before the Tribunal is decided on its
merits and involves consideration of the individual circumstances presented by
each applicant. It was argued that the variation in individuals’ circumstances
mean that it is seldom possible to compare individual cases.[364]
3.70
In response to concerns over a lack of legal
representation at hearings, the RRT noted that, while the conduct of the
hearing is at the discretion of the Tribunal Member, the hearing must be a
genuine opportunity to present evidence and arguments. In practice,
representatives are invited to provide submissions and comments after the
applicant has given their evidence, but when and how they do so remains at the
discretion of the Member. The RRT also noted that procedural fairness may
require that an applicant before the tribunal be represented in hearings.[365]
3.71
The RRT also advised it's contract for the provision of
interpretative services stipulates that the interpreters provided by the Contractor
must be generally accredited to NAATI Interpreter Level or above, where such
accreditation is provided in the language. Where accreditation is not
available, or where the Contractor is unable to provide an interpreter at the
NAATI level or above, the Contractor must seek approval from the Tribunals.
Interpreters are also required to comply with the standards and requirements
set out in the RRT's Interpreter Handbook and the code of ethics devised by the
Australian Institute for Interpreters and Translators. They are also generally
required to advise the Tribunal of any possible conflicts of interest.[366]
3.72
The RRT did advise that on occasion difficulties were
experienced in obtaining appropriately qualified interpreters in high demand
language (such as Vietnamese) and also obtaining accredited interpreters in
emerging languages (such as African languages).[367]
3.73
In response to concerns over the time being taken to
decide cases, the RRT noted that the Tribunal now had the lowest average
processing times since the RRT was established in 1993.[368]
3.74
The Committee also observes that recent amendments to
the Migration
Act noted above will require the RRT to finalise reviews within 90 days.
However, as explained, failure to comply with this deadline will not render an
RRT decision invalid. As also explained above, a range of measures have been or
are being developed to achieve this deadline, including transfer of MRT members
to the RRT to assist with the RRT caseload.
Further avenues for review
3.75
There are two potential further avenues for review
following a decision of a review tribunal.
-
A written request to the Minister to exercise
his or her personal discretion to grant a visa
-
An appeal to the courts for a review of the
Tribunal decision.
Ministerial
discretionary power to substitute a more favourable decision
3.76
An applicant may apply to the Minister to exercise his
or her discretionary powers under sections 351 and 417 of the Migration Act to
substitute a more favourable decision. These powers are discussed in Chapter 4.
Judicial review of visa related
decisions
3.77
As mentioned above, a person who wishes to challenge a
decision of the MRT, the RRT or the AAT can seek to have that decision reviewed
by the Federal Magistrates Court, the Federal Court or the High Court.
Jurisdiction
3.78
The jurisdiction of the Federal Magistrates Court and
the Federal Court to review decisions is largely conferred by, and subject to
the Migration Act.[369] If a person is
unsuccessful in the Federal Court, they may appeal in the first instance to the
full bench of the Federal Court, and then to the High Court under section 73 of
the Constitution. Primary decisions
(ie, decisions by DIMIA officials) for which there is a right to merits review by
the MRT, the RRT, or the AAT, are not reviewable. Only
decisions of the MRT, the RRT and the AAT are reviewable by the Federal Court
or the Federal Magistrates Court.[370]
3.79
An applicant may also appeal directly to the High Court (ie, without going through the Federal
Court or Federal Magistrates Court) for interlocutory relief from a decision of
a primary decision maker or a Tribunal under the original powers of the High
Court, contained in section 75(v) of the Constitution.[371]
3.80
The courts cannot review the merits of the case.
An appeal may on be lodged on the basis that an error of law has been committed in the making of the decision.
Part 8 of the Migration Act applies a ‘privative clause’ that applies to most
decisions made under the Migration Act, including decisions of the RRT, MRT and
AAT, to narrow the scope for judicial review of those decisions. In February 2003, the High Court upheld the
constitutional validity of the privative clause but found that it did not apply
to decisions tainted by 'jurisdictional error'. Jurisdictional error covers
most legal errors.[372]
3.81
DIMIA
has stated that, in practice, this means that the Federal Court, the Federal
Magistrates Court or the High Court cannot overturn the visa-related decision
unless:
-
the decision-maker was not acting in good
faith in making the decision; or
- the decision is not reasonably capable of
reference to the decision-making power given to the decision-maker; or
- the decision does not relate to the subject
matter of the legislation; or
- the decision exceeded the limits set out in
the Constitution.[373]
3.82
The Migration Act also prevents class, representative
or otherwise grouped court actions in migration proceedings.[374]
3.83
If a court finds a jurisdictional error in a decision
under review, it cannot substitute its own decision. The courts must return the
decision to the decision maker to be reconsidered, subject to any directions
issued by the court. The High Court has the power to quash decisions under
review and to issue a writ of mandamus,
compelling the Minister to consider the decisions and remit the matter back to
a differently constituted Tribunal.[375]
Time limits
3.84
Applications must be made to the Federal Court Registry
within 28 days of the person concerned being deemed to have been notified of
the decision. The same time limit applies to applications to the Federal
Magistrates Court. Applications made directly to the High Court under section
75 of the Commonwealth Constitution must currently be made within 35 days of
actual notification of the decision.[376]
Caseload
3.85
2,714
applications for judicial review of migration decisions were filed in 2004-05.
Of these 73 percent were reviewing RRT decisions, 17 percent challenged MRT
decisions, with the remaining 10 per cent for review of other decisions.
3.86
Applications
to the Federal Magistrates Court and the Federal Court at first instance for judicial
review of portfolio decisions have increased over the past ten years. In
1993-94 there were 381 applications to the Federal Magistrates Court and the
Federal Court, compared with 3,748 in 2003-04.[377]
Outcomes
3.87
As
DIMIA explains, a case is resolved when: either the applicant or the Minister
withdraws before hearing, or the court remits the decision to the decision-maker
for reconsideration (that is, the applicant wins), or the court dismisses the
application (that is, the Minister wins). In 2004-05, the Federal Magistrates
Court and the Federal Court at first instance dismissed 2,099 applications
after hearing and another 896 before hearing when applicants discontinued, and upheld
112 applications after hearing and remitted the decisions for reconsideration.
The Minister also withdrew from 264 matters prior to hearing.
3.88
Table
3.9 below sets out the outcomes of matters before the Federal Court in the
first instance.
Table 3.9: Outcome of
matters before the Federal Court.
Year |
Applicant
Withdrawal |
Minister
Withdrawal |
Applicant
Win |
Minister
Win |
Total |
2000-01 |
396 |
205 |
71 |
611 |
1283 |
2001-02 |
410 |
131 |
75 |
811 |
1427 |
2002-03 |
526 |
53 |
48 |
879 |
1506 |
2003-04 |
890 |
136 |
102 |
2451 |
3579 |
2004-05 |
896 |
264 |
112 |
2099 |
3371 |
Source: DIMIA Fact Sheet 9, Litigation Involving Migration Decisions, 25 October 2005
Concerns raised in previous
inquiries
3.89
The significant growth in the number of applications
for judicial review and the costs and the time taken to determine these appeals
have been the concern of government over a number of years.[378] These concerns have prompted
successive governments to seek to amend
the Migration Act to restrict judicial review of visa related decision making.[379] These measures have in turned
prompted a number of parliamentary inquiries which have canvassed the arguments
for and against restricting access to judicial review.
3.90
In 1999-2000, this Committee inquired into whether,
among other things, there was sufficient oversight by the judiciary of Australia's
onshore refugee determination process to ensure that Australia's
international obligations were met. That Committee concluded :
The weight of evidence and submissions presented to the Inquiry
argued in favour of the need to maintain a judicial review system for refugee
determination that has the power to pass judgement on refugee matters under the
rule of law, while respecting and maintaining the ideal of the separation of
powers. Some submissions also argued that judicial oversight promotes the
development of jurisprudence in the migration area and encourages consistency
in decision-making. Australia’s
international legal obligations to provide access to courts and tribunals and
judicial oversight of the refugee determination, must also be met. However,
according to DIMA, judicial oversight involving litigation in the courts is a
resource-intensive review process. All parties in the review process of refugee
determination are concerned about the costs of either operating or engaging in
the system of review presently in place.[380]
3.91
The committee at that time refrained from recommending major
reforms of the judicial review of refugee determination process. Instead the
Committee recommended that a feasibility study be undertaken on the benefits of
modifying the current on-shore refugee determination process. The study would assess,
among other matters, the feasibility of moving to a wholly judicial
determination process, including the costs of any such process. An objective
would be to assess if such a process could be more open and transparent than
the current multi-tiered system, which the majority of the committee considered
had been highly criticised.[381]
3.92
The Government did not accept this recommendation. It
argued that it had mechanisms in place to monitor the performance and
effectiveness of the onshore refugee determination process and, moreover,
efforts are continually made to maintain its integrity and improve its
efficiency.[382]
Concerns raised during this inquiry
3.93
The issue of the Act's restrictions on judicial review
of the refugee determination process arose during this inquiry principally in
the context of perceived shortcomings and inadequacies of the MRT and RRT as
review bodies.
3.94
In light of the concerns over the Tribunals' capacity
to decide matters appropriately, much was made of the fact that the courts, in
undertaking judicial review of Tribunal decisions were generally bound by the Tribunals'
finding of fact in the case. The ICJ, for example, expressed alarm over the
fact that:
...[t]here is no right of appeal to a court if the review tribunal
clearly makes errors of fact. The tribunals are the final arbiters of fact;
there is no access to merits review of a decision of the MRT or RRT. ... Except for the limited ground of 'jurisdictional
error of law', decisions of the MRT and RRT are immune from judicial review or
oversight under ordinary administrative law principles.[383]
3.95
Similar concerns was raised by Mr
Julian Burnside
QC:
One of the problems is that there is some pretty bad decision
making in the RRT. People then try to go to court, but the court’s hands are
tied largely because they cannot review the merits of the case; they can only
look at whether there has been a jurisdictional error. That is a pretty
difficult concept and there have been some quite horrifying decisions that have
nevertheless survived judicial review.
3.96
Church organisations and representatives also expressed
alarm over government moves to restrict judicial scrutiny. In a joint
submission, for example, Uniting Justice Australia
and Asylum Seekers Project Hotham Mission pointed to widespread community dissatisfaction
with Australia's
system for assessing refugee claims, with a widely held view that the system is
unjust:
The minimalist interpretation of the definition of a refugee
under the Refugee Convention and Protocol combined with the failure of the RRT
to act as an independent and reliable body that both does, and is perceived to,
conduct fair and proper merits review of departmental decisions, has resulted
in widespread community dissatisfaction with the system for assessing refugee
claims. The system is not widely perceived to be just. This perceived lack of
justice is exacerbated by the emphasis, in the broader program, on deterring
people from accessing the onshore protection system. In this policy
environment, reform of application processing and review rarely considers human
rights and our obligations to asylum seekers, but rather focuses on the
resources that asylum seekers use in having their protection claim assessed.
These failings, combined with efforts to limit judicial scrutiny, have resulted
in a widespread view that an appeal to the RRT does little to guarantee the
applicant a fair, thorough, and independent examination of the claim.[384]
3.97
Witnesses and submitters called for reform. It was
argued that widening the scope for judicial review and oversight would improve
the quality of decision-making in the review tribunals:
Only through full judicial oversight of review tribunal
decisions can one have real confidence in the outcomes of the tribunals. ... the
only way to achieve this is to reinstate merits review in the federal courts.
Otherwise, potential miscarriages of justice that flow from the structure and
procedures in the tribunals will inevitably continue to occur.
As a less satisfactory alternative to full merits review in the
courts, policy makers should at least permits judicial review on the basis of
ordinary error of law and in particular, under accepted principles of
administrative law, and under the Administrative
Decisions (Judicial Review) Act 1977. This is the situation in the AAT.[385]
3.98
Mr Burnside
QC also recommended reform:
I think also that a system would be workable if it allowed for
an appeal to the courts—not a judicial review, but an appeal – so that you get
a merits review in court, but subject to a filter at the front end. The last
thing any of us wants, especially those of us in the profession, is to see the
courts flooded with merits reviews.
If you had a front-end filter, something like the special leave
requirements in the High Court, a judge would have a look at the application,
see whether he or she thought that something had gone wrong in the tribunal
and, if so, then you would have a merits appeal in court. If he or she did not
think something had gone wrong, then all you would have would be the residual
judicial review so that, if something had gone wrong in jurisdictional terms,
that would still be open to correction. Having that sort of pressure release
valve of merits review in the court would save some very serious problems. I
think it would give refugee appellants a sense that they have had some sort of
justice, because frankly a lot of them come away from the RRT thinking that
they have not had justice, and you would have to agree with them in a lot of
cases.[386]
Committee view
3.99
The committee notes and acknowledges the concern of
many witnesses and submitters with respect to judicial review of tribunal
decisions. It is frustrating that the substantive issues put to this committee's
inquiry are little changed from those put to various other inquiries over a
number of years, and have not been addressed.
3.100
Managing an appeals process is always complex and there
will always be those who exploit any available appeals process as a way to draw
out the length of proceedings and so extend their stay in the country. However,
the committee cannot help but conclude that DIMIA administers the review system
with two underlying – but unarticulated – assumptions that all appeals are
essentially vexatious, and that anyone who does not get the result they want
will appeal. This cynicism risks blinding DIMIA to real instances of injustice.
3.101
In spite of departmental assurances that 'procedures
are in place' to ensure impartiality, due process and fairness, it is striking
that virtually everyone else, without exception, disagrees. In many cases, as
this chapter has shown, these critics are both experienced in the law
generally, and in the operation of DIMIA's tribunals. As such, their criticisms
are well informed and cannot be lightly dismissed.
3.102
The fact remains that DIMIA's tribunals are considered
to be partisan, to not adequately apply natural justice procedures, and
therefore not able to consistently deliver just outcomes.
3.103
Several matters stand out. The first of these is
impartiality.
3.104
The credibility of a tribunal depends largely on public
confidence in the competence and impartiality of its members. However, evidence
to this inquiry and other inquiries is that there is a widely held perception
that the RRT's integrity and independence is seriously compromised by its
current arrangements. As the ARC stated in a 1996 report, it is crucial that
members of the community feel confident that tribunal members are of the
highest standard of competence and integrity and that they perform their duties
free from undue government or other influence. It is crucial that there is no
perception (let alone reality) that tribunals are in any way influenced either
in reaching decisions in particular cases or more generally.[387] To this end, the committee
reiterates the recommendation made in 2000 that the Migration Act be amended to
allow for multi-member panels.
3.105
For the tribunals to have credibility, the appointment
process of members must also be amended. The Minister should have no place in
appointing quasi-judicial officials who will be making assessments of her department's
decision making. Appointments should be made by a transparent, merit based
process and made by either an independent panel or at the least, the Attorney
General or Minister for Justice. Adjustments should also be made to the rules
of tenure to remove any perception that members are subject to undue
ministerial or departmental influence.
3.106
A second matter relates to procedure. Again, the committee
notes the department's easy assurance that procedural rules are in place.
However, they are apparently not the right ones. As this chapter shows, current
provisions allow basic flaws in natural justice, relating to capacity to
respond to adverse evidence, to be properly represented, and to call and
challenge witnesses. Leaving these matters solely to the arbitrary discretion
of Members is not adequate.
3.107
Third, as explained in Chapter 2, the committee
endorses the Government's move to introduce a 90 day time period or target by
which the RRT should finalise reviews involving protective visa applications.
However, the committee is concerned that, in responding to this expectation,
there is a need to ensure that both the MRT and RRT (which share an
increasingly common Membership) are adequately resourced and funded for the
task at hand. The committee notes proposals for MRT members to transfer across
to the RRT to assist with the RRT caseload in peak times. There is a need to
ensure that this does not adversely affect the MRT's ability to progress its
caseload. It is noted that the average
time taken by the MRT in 2004-05 to process a case (ie, from lodgement to
finalisation) was 39 weeks.
3.108
The committee notes that the ANAO is undertaking a
performance audit of the RRT and the MRT as part of the ANAO audit work program
issued in July 2004. The audit commenced in April 2005 and is focussed on
productivity issues, quality of service and trends in review outcomes and the
relationship between DIMIA, the RRT and the MRT.[388] The specific objective of the audit
is to assess whether the MRT and the RRT:
-
have established appropriate arrangements for
the governance, business planning and performance management of tribunal
operations;
-
have achieved intended operational efficiencies
from the introduction of common facilities, services and resourcing;
-
provide appropriate training and development and
information support services to promote quality decision-making;
-
make case decisions within applicable tribunal
time and productivity standards;
-
provide applicants with services and conduct
tribunal reviews in accordance with statutory requirements and tribunal service
standards; and
-
appropriately communicate and consult with DIMIA
and other Tribunal stakeholders.
3.109
The audit report is expected to be tabled in the Autumn
2006 Parliamentary Sittings.[389]
3.110
The committee acknowledges that many failed asylum
seekers are unlikely to have the finances to meet the application fee that is
imposed following an unsuccessful review application and therefore must either
borrow the money, which in most cases would be impossible, or rely on community
support. However, as the fee is only imposed following an unsuccessful review
application, the committee does not consider that the fee acts as a
disincentive to people wishing to seek a review. As to the level of the fee,
the committee makes no comment. In relation to the provision of transcripts of
RRT immigration hearings to unsuccessful applicants, the committee considers
that these should be provided on the same basis as applies to non-immigration
matters.
3.111
The committee shares the concern of many witnesses and
submitters over the potential costs and injustice incurred as a result of the
inflexible time limits for lodgement of applications for review in the MRT and
the RRT. All fact finding tribunals and courts, whilst working to time limits,
should have the discretion to vary time limits in particular cases before them
in the interests of justice.
Recommendation 20
3.112
The committee recommends that DIMIA and the Department
of Finance and Administration review the RRT and MRT current funding levels and
systems in light of the current and expected workloads of both Tribunals.
Recommendation 21
3.113
The committee recommends that the Migration Act be
amended to provide that the MRT and RRT can, in appropriate circumstances, grant
an extension of time in which to lodge applications for review.
Recommendation 22
3.1
The committee recommends that the Migration Act 1958 be amended to provide an entitlement to legal
representation at Tribunal hearings for applicants and an entitlement to call
and examine witnesses at hearings.
Recommendation 23
3.114
The committee recommends that the Commonwealth legal
aid guidelines be amended to provide for assistance in migration matters, both
at the preliminary and review stages, subject to applicants satisfying means
and merit tests, and that necessary funding be provided to meet the need for
such services.
Recommendation 24
3.115
The committee recommends that applicants have a right
to be provided with copies of documents the contents of which Tribunal members
propose to rely upon to affirm the decision that is under review.
Recommendation 25
3.116
The committee recommends that RRT incorporate into its
Practice Directions specific guidelines on its approach to credibility.
Recommendation 26
3.117
The committee recommends that the MRT and the RRT be
included in the training and development initiatives and strategies being
developed by DIMIA as part of the response to the Palmer
report.
Recommendation 27
3.118
The committee recommends that the RRT incorporate into
its Practice Directions specific guidelines on the weight to be given to expert
medical reports, especially those detailing a claimant’s history of persecution
with a clinical assessment of their current psychological condition.
Recommendation 28
3.119
The committee recommends that the RRT be able to sit as
a single member body and as a panel of up to three members as appropriately
determined by a Senior, or the Principal Member. Members would be drawn from
people with appropriate backgrounds for considering refugee and humanitarian
applications.
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