Chapter 4 - Ministerial discretion
4.1
This chapter explores the concept of ministerial
discretion and its implementation, the nature of a non-compellable and
non-reviewable decision and forced refoulement,
when an applicant is unable to gain refugee status under the Refugee
Convention. It outlines the statutory framework and application processes and
canvasses the concerns raised in respect of that process to date.
Statutory framework
4.2
The Migration Act provides the Minister with various
discretionary powers, including substitution powers and powers to vary
processes, order release from detention and cancel visas on character grounds.
4.3
Key provisions include sections 351, 417 and 501J of
the Migration Act which generally authorise the Minister to substitute a decision
of the Migration Review Tribunal (MRT) the Refugee Review Tribunal (RRT) or the
Administrative Appeals Tribunal (AAT) respectively with a decision that is more
favourable to the applicant, where the Minister believes it is in the public
interest to do so. Although the Act does not specify that the
'more favourable decision' must result in the grant of a visa to the applicant,
it is understood that the discretionary power is most commonly used in that
way.[390]
4.4
Another key provision is section 48B of the Migration
Act which confers a personal non-compellable power on the Minister to allow a
person refused a protection visa to lodge a valid fresh protection visa
application.[391]
4.5
In June
2005, as part of a reform package to secure 'greater flexibility,
fairness and timeliness' in immigration matters, the Government moved to amend the Migration Act to confer the following
discretionary 'public interest' powers on the Minister:
-
Section 195A
empowers the Minister to grant a visa to a person in immigration
detention (whether or not the person has applied for the visa) if the Minister
thinks that it is in the public interest to do so. In exercising the power, the Minister is not bound by the usual
requirements that apply to the grant of visas. The Minister may grant any visa
that the Minister considers is appropriate to that individual’s circumstances.
-
Section 197AB
empowers the Minister to make 'a residence determination' if the Minister
considers this is in the public interest. A residence determination provides
that a person in immigration detention may reside other than in an immigration
detention centre or secured arrangements (that is, the detainees would be free
to move about in the community without being accompanied or restrained by an
officer), subject to any conditions specified in that determination. The stated
purpose of the power is to enable the detention of families with children to
take place in the community under conditions that can meet their individual
circumstances.
-
Section 197A
provides that the Minister may at any time revoke or vary a residence
determination in any respect if the Minister thinks that it is in the public
interest to do so.[392]
4.6
Much of the evidence to this (and earlier) parliamentary
inquiries has concerned the discretionary powers under sections 351 and 417 of
the Act, which are therefore the focus for this chapter. Section 351 powers may
be exercised following a decision of the MRT which considers all cases except
protection visa cases, whereas section 417 powers may be exercised following a
decision of the RRT which considers only protection visa cases.
4.7
The discretionary powers under sections 351 and 417 have
the following features:
-
They may only be used to intervene in a matter
where the Minister believes it is in the public interest to do so.
-
They may only be exercised in circumstances
where a visa application has been assessed both at primary and merits review
stages as failing to meet the criteria for grant of a visa – for example, at
the MRT under section 351 and at the RRT under section 417.
-
They are non-compellable and non-reviewable. That
is, the Minister does not have a duty to exercise the discretionary power, and
a court cannot order the Minister to use the discretionary power to consider an
applicant's case.
-
They may only be exercised personally by the Minister
and cannot be delegated.
-
When exercising them to grant a visa, the Minister
is generally not restricted by the type of substantive visa that can be
granted, and does not have to be satisfied that criteria specified in the
Migration Regulations have been met.
-
Having exercised these powers, the Minister must
table a statement in both Houses of Parliament setting out the decision of the
relevant tribunal, the decision substituted by the Minister, and the reasons
for substituting a more favourable decision.
How the powers are exercised
4.8
Matters that may require the exercise of the above
powers are brought to the Minister's attention in one of two ways:
-
Requests for Ministerial intervention, whereby an
applicant or their representative may write to the Minister seeking her
intervention through the exercise of her discretionary powers. The Committee
understands that such requests are treated as Ministerial correspondence.
-
Assessment of cases returned from review
authorities. An automatic assessment is undertaken where a review authority –
such as the RRT or the AAT – rejects an application for review and affirms DIMIA's
decision on a protection visa application. This occurs irrespective of whether
or not a request for ministerial intervention has been made. A review authority
or the court may also identify circumstances that may warrant the Minister's
intervention and refer the case back to DIMIA.[393]
Reliance on Ministerial Guidelines
4.9
Processing of requests and returned cases is undertaken
by DIMIA officials in accordance with Ministerial Guidelines. The Minister has issued
a set of Guidelines on the identification of 'unique or exceptional' circumstances
where the Minister may consider it appropriate to use the discretionary powers.
The Guidelines provide that unique or exceptional circumstances may be shown by:
-
Circumstances that evidence a significant threat
to a person's safety, human rights or human dignity on return to their country
of origin;
-
Circumstances that may bring Australia's obligations
under the Convention Against Torture (CAT) into consideration; namely where
there are substantial grounds for believing that the person would be in danger
of being subjected to torture in the State to which they would be returned;
-
Circumstances that may bring Australia's obligations
under the Convention on the Rights of the Child (CROC) into consideration,
particularly the obligation that the best interests of the child be given
primary consideration;
-
Circumstances that in which Australia has
obligations under the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR).
For example, where a person would face a real risk that their human rights
would be violated through torture, cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment of
punishment if they were removed from Australia;
-
Circumstances that the legislation could not
have anticipated or where the application of the legislation leads to unfair or
unreasonable results;
-
Strong compassionate grounds relating to harm or
hardship to an Australian family;
-
Circumstances where exceptional economic,
scientific cultural or other benefit to Australia would result if the person
was permitted to retain in Australia;
-
The length of time the person has been present
in Australia;
-
Compassionate circumstances such as the age,
health, psychological state of the person.[394]
4.10
The Guidelines and associated instructions also specifically
list cases which would be 'inappropriate for the Minister to consider'. These
include cases in which:
-
migration related litigation has not yet been
finalised;
-
the applicant has made another visa application
that has yet to be determined;
-
where there is an ongoing request to the Minister
to exercise another power; or
-
where the case has been remitted or set aside by
a review body.[395]
4.11
The Guidelines are intended to provide guidance to DIMIA
officials involved in processing requests and returned cases. They are not
criteria for intervention nor intended to be exhaustive. Nor are they binding
on the Minister. Each case is to be considered in isolation and on its merits.
Previous decisions of the Minister have no impact on the assessment of each
case against the Guidelines.[396]
Processing and assessment by DIMIA
4.12
Requests for Ministerial intervention are allocated to
one of four Ministerial Intervention Units (MIU) located in Sydney,
Melbourne, Perth
and Canberra for processing. Requests
concerning persons in immigration detention are referred to DIMIA's national
offices.
4.13
Requests for Ministerial intervention are not passed to
the original departmental decision maker or case officer for review and
comment. However, it is understood that the referred or return review authority
decisions are usually sent back to the original DIMIA decision maker for
analysis. This is to provide feedback to the decision-maker. The officers are
tasked to automatically refer any case which they assess meets the Minister’s
guidelines for referral to the relevant MIU.[397]
4.14
The role of the MIU includes conducting a check on whether
the Minister is able to exercise his public interest powers. As mentioned
above, the Minister’s public interest power is not available unless a review authority
decision has been made. It is also not available if there is no longer a review
authority decision in existence for which the Minister can substitute a more
favourable decision.[398] That is,
where:
-
the review authority has made a decision to
remit the matter to DIMIA and a departmental decision-maker has made a subsequent
decision on the case; or
-
the decision set aside by a court and the case
is remitted to the review authority. [399]
4.15
If the request is within power and that does not fall
within the 'inappropriate to consider' category, the MIU is then required to make
an assessment against the Guidelines.[400]
4.16
In the event that a request or case is assessed as falling
within the Guidelines, DIMIA will prepare a submission to the Minister to
enable her to decide whether she wishes to consider the case. The submission
will outline the reasons why DIMIA considers the matter falls within the Guidelines
and provide a statement of the matter, its background and any relevant issues.
It is understood that DIMIA refrains from making a recommendation in the
submission to the Minister on whether or not the discretionary powers should be
exercised. However, submissions may also set out a range of visa options
available in the event that the Minister decides to use his or her
discretionary power to grant a visa.
4.17
Requests for Ministerial intervention assessed by DIMIA
as not falling within the Guidelines are sent to the Minister in the form of a
schedule summarising each matter.[401]
It remains for the Minister to decide whether or not to consider each matter.
4.18
The Committee understands that cases returned or
referred from review authorities or the courts and assessed by DIMIA as not falling
within the Guidelines are not referred to the Minister. Rather, a file note to that
effect signed and dated by the assessing officer, is placed on file and no further
action is taken.
4.19
There is no limit on the number of times a person may
request intervention by the Minister. However, once a request has been
considered by the Minister, subsequent requests by the same applicant are not
usually brought to the Minister's attention unless they are assessed by DIMIA
as meeting the Guidelines for referral. This could occur, for example, where a subsequent
request provides significant new information on the case, or where the
department becomes aware of such significant new information through its own
research or other avenues.[402]
4.20
It is understood that no automatic assessment of non-protection visa decisions by review
bodies is undertaken by DIMIA. That is, the relevant instructions only provide
that an assessment under the Guidelines may
be undertaken by DIMIA if a review authority – such as the MRT – affirms a non-protection
visa decision.[403]
Impact
on removal of unlawful non-citizens
4.21
A request for Ministerial intervention of itself will
have no effect on the removal provisions of the Migration Act. Section 198 of that
Act requires the removal of unlawful non-citizens (whether or not they are also
detainees) who are not either holding or applying for a visa. A request for the
Minister to exercise one of the public interest powers such as section 351 or
417 is not regarded as an application for a visa and unless the request leads
to the grant of a visa, such a request has no effect on the removal provisions.[404]
4.22
The Migration Regulations provide that the making of a
request for the Minister to exercise his public interest powers under sections
351 and 417, among others, is a ground for the grant of a bridging visa. An
applicant must meet the specified criteria for the grant of such a visa.[405]
Time
taken to assess cases and requests
4.23
DIMIA advised that the automatic assessment by DIMIA of
returned or referred review authority decisions is generally completed within
28 days of the case files being returned to the
department.[406] However, the time
taken to resolve requests for intervention made by individuals:
... can vary significantly depending on the complexity of the
issues raised, the completeness of the information and argument provided in
support of the intervention, and the number and spacing of submissions and
correspondence being provided in support of the case. Where a case has been
referred to the Minister, the issue of possible Ministerial intervention
remains open until such time as the Minister considers whether or not to use
her power in a particular case.[407]
4.24
The Committee notes that, during 2004-05, DIMIA acted
to streamline the Ministerial intervention support arrangements and establish
stronger management and coordination arrangements for community and detention
caseloads. Management of the detention caseload was centralised in Canberra
to strengthen liaison with detention management areas and the Minister's
office.[408]
Caseload
4.25
The
following tables provide an indication of the case load for the requests for Ministerial
intervention.
Table 4.1: Use of Ministerial
Discretion 1999 to 2005
Year |
1999-00 |
2000-01 |
2001-02 |
2002-03 |
2003-04 |
2004-05 |
Humanitarian* |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Requests |
3709 |
3370 |
4472 |
4489 |
4138 |
2802 |
Interventions |
179 |
289 |
203 |
213 |
655 |
142 |
Percent |
4.8 |
8.6 |
4.5 |
4.7 |
15.8 |
5.1 |
Non-humanitarian** |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Requests |
888 |
850 |
1178 |
1471 |
1297 |
995 |
Interventions |
86 |
109 |
159 |
270 |
277 |
97 |
Percent |
9.7 |
12.8 |
13.5 |
18.4 |
21.3 |
9.7 |
Totals |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Requests |
4597 |
4220 |
5650 |
5969 |
5435 |
3797 |
Interventions |
265 |
398 |
362 |
483 |
932 |
239 |
Percent |
5.8 |
9.4 |
6.4 |
8.1 |
17.2 |
6.3 |
*Interventions under s417, s454 and s501J,
described as ‘Humanitarian’ by DIMIA
**Interventions under s345, s351 and s391, Described as 'Non-humanitarian’ by
DIMIA
Table 4.2: Ministerial
Interventions on RRT and MRT Decisions
Year |
1999-00 |
2000-01 |
2001-02 |
2002-03 |
2003-04 |
2004-05 |
Humanitarian |
|
|
|
|
|
|
RRT |
5417 |
4858 |
4647 |
5391 |
5810 |
3033 |
Interventions |
179 |
289 |
203 |
213 |
655 |
142 |
Percentage |
3.3 |
6.0 |
4.4 |
4.0 |
11.3 |
4.7 |
Non-humanitarian |
|
|
|
|
|
|
IRT/MRT |
1625 |
2498 |
3360 |
4087 |
3925 |
3284 |
Interventions |
86 |
109 |
159 |
270 |
277 |
97 |
Percentage |
5.3 |
4.4 |
4.7 |
6.6 |
7.0 |
2.9 |
Totals |
|
|
|
|
|
|
All
Tribunals |
7042 |
7356 |
8007 |
8946 |
9735 |
6317 |
Interventions |
265 |
398 |
362 |
483 |
932 |
239 |
Percentage |
3.8 |
5.4 |
4.5 |
5.4 |
9.6 |
3.8 |
*Decisions affirmed by IRT
**Decisions affirmed by IRT and MRT
Source: Tables
provided to the Committee by the Department of Immigration and Multicultural
and Indigenous Affairs on 12 January 2006.
Concerns raised in earlier inquiries
4.26
The Minister's discretionary powers in migration matters
were considered in two inquiries in recent years—in 2000 by a predecessor of this
committee (see A Sanctuary under Review: An
Examination of Australia's Refugee and Humanitarian Determination Processes,
June 2000), and in 2004 by the Select Committee
on Ministerial Discretion in Migration Matters, a specially-constituted Senate
Select Committee which tabled its report in March 2004.[409]
The Senate Legal and Constitutional
References Committee 2000 inquiry
4.27
This committee's report of 2000, A Sanctuary under Review, examined, among other things, the concept
of Ministerial discretion, its implementation and administrative procedures,
and the nature of a non-compellable and non-reviewable decision and forced refoulement when an applicant is unable
to gain refugee status under the Refugee Convention.
4.28
The committee's report concluded that the Ministerial
discretions, such as that provided under section 417 of the Migration Act, were
valuable and should be retained.[410]
However, in light of the evidence received during its inquiry, the committee
recommended a number of procedural and administrative improvements to the way
the discretionary powers are exercised. Issues covered by these recommendations
included that:
-
the Minister should consult with stakeholders to
ensure the Ministerial guidelines are contemporary and address the specific
purposes of Australia's obligations under the CAT, CROC and ICCPR;
-
the RRT should continue its current practice
whereby members informally advise the Minister of cases where there may be
humanitarian grounds for protection under international conventions;
-
an information sheet should be made available in
appropriate languages to explain the provisions of section 417 and the Ministerial
guidelines, as well as information about section 48B;
-
section 417 processes should be completed
quickly and the outcome advised to the relevant person;
-
the subject of the request should not be removed
from Australia before the initial or first section 417 process is finalised;
and
-
appropriately trained DIMA staff should consider
all section 417 requests and referrals against CAT, CROC, and ICCPR.[411]
4.29
The Government's response to the above was to maintain
that existing administrative procedures and arrangements were adequate.[412]
The Select Committee's 2004 inquiry
4.30
As mentioned above, a Select Committee was established
in June 2003 to inquire into the use and appropriateness of the Minister's
discretionary powers under sections 351 and 417 of the Migration Act. It tabled
its report in March 2004.[413]
4.31
The Select Committee found almost unanimous support for
having some capacity for Ministerial discretion in the migration legislation. However,
while the committee concluded that the Ministerial intervention powers should
be retained as the ultimate safety net in the migration system, evidence to
that inquiry highlighted a pressing need for reform of their operation.
4.32
The Select Committee's findings are summarised below.
The full listing of its 21 recommendations is shown at Appendix 7.
Lack of transparency and accountability
4.33
The Select Committee found that a lack of transparency and
accountability of the Minister's decision making process was a serious
deficiency in need of urgent attention. The sole accountability mechanism in
cases where the discretionary power is used to grant a visa is a requirement
that the Minister table statements in parliament on a six-monthly basis.
According to the legislation, these statements must set out the Minister's
reasons for thinking intervention is in the public interest. However, in recent
years, tabling statements had outlined only in the broadest terms cases where
the Minister has intervened. The Select Committee noted its concern that:
... vesting a non-delegable, non-reviewable and non-compellable
discretion with the immigration minister without an adequate accountability
mechanism creates both the possibility and perception of corruption. At a
minimum, the Committee wants to see external scrutiny of decision making made
an integral part of the ministerial discretion system. This should bring a
greater degree of transparency into the decision making process and reduce the
scope for corruption of the system.[414]
4.34
The Select Committee made several recommendations to
address the perceived shortcomings in the accountability of the Minister's discretionary
powers. To ensure parliamentary scrutiny of the use of discretionary powers,
the Select Committee recommended that the Minister's tabling statements provide
reasons why a decision to intervene is in the public interest and indicate how
the case was brought to the Minister's attention – by an approach from the visa
applicant, by a representative on behalf of the visa applicant, on the
suggestion of a tribunal, at the initiative of an officer of the department or
in some other way. [415]
4.35
It was also recommended that the Government establish
an independent committee as part of the Ministerial intervention process to
improve the equity and transparency of the process and restore public
confidence in the system. The purpose of the committee would be to review
DIMIA's submissions and schedules and recommend to the Minister cases which it
believes warranted Ministerial intervention.[416]
4.36
The Select Committee was concerned by evidence that the
Minister's discretionary powers were being used on average several hundred
times each year instead of for the few exceptional cases they were originally
designed to deal with.[417]
4.37
DIMIA had advised that there were three main reasons
for the increase in the use of Ministerial discretion since 1996-97. First, the
Government has chosen to deal with onshore applications for visas on a case-by-case
basis rather than by establishing special visa categories. Second, there have
been more requests as the workload and decisions made by the tribunals have
increased significantly. Third, there is greater public awareness of the
existence and the processes of the exercise of discretion. DIMIA also suggested
that judicial review has influenced the number and timing of requests.
4.38
The Select Committee was unable to test these claims,
as it could not draw firm conclusions about the use of Ministerial discretion
from the available data, which it described as being limited in respect of its
reliability and detail. It therefore recommended that DIMIA establish
procedures for collecting and publishing statistical data on the operation and
use of the Ministerial discretion powers to improve the accountability of the
system.[418]
DIMIA involvement in vetting applications
4.39
The Select Committee noted that the Minister's capacity
to formulate an independent view on a particular case depended almost entirely on the information provided by DIMIA. The processing
and decision making process within DIMIA, especially whether to prepare for the
Minister a submission or a schedule, was critical to the success or otherwise
of individual cases. However, evidence to that inquiry – including evidence
from the Commonwealth Ombudsman – revealed 'serious and fundamental
administrative' weaknesses in DIMIA's decision making processes.
4.40
The Select Committee therefore recommended that:
-
DIMIA establish a procedure of routine auditing
of its internal submission process;
-
the Commonwealth Ombudsman carry out an annual
audit of the consistency of DIMIA's application of the Ministerial and
administrative guidelines on the operation of the Minister's discretionary
powers. The audit should include a sample of cases to determine whether the
criteria set out in the guidelines are being applied, and to identify any
inconsistency in the approach of different case officers.[419]
4.41
The Select Committee also recommended that the role of
the RRT and MRT in the Ministerial discretion process be reconsidered.[420] The Committee accepted that the
Tribunals' core task is the review of DIMIA decisions to refuse or cancel
protection and other visas. However, the Tribunals were seen as being well
placed to assess the entirety of an applicant's circumstances, especially when
new information is presented that was not previously available to the
department. The Select Committee recommended that the MRT and the RRT:
-
standardise their procedures for identifying and
notifying DIMIA of cases raising humanitarian and compassionate considerations;
and
-
keep statistical records of cases referred to
DIMIA, the grounds for referral and the outcome of such referrals.[421]
Limited advice, assistance and
information for applicants
4.42
The Select Committee found a lack of available
information for applicants about Ministerial discretion and its processes. To
address these deficiencies, the Select Committee recommended that:
-
DIMIA create an information sheet and
application form in appropriate languages that explains the Ministerial guidelines
and application process; [422]
-
a consultative process
be established between DIMIA and applicants for Ministerial intervention where
applicants are shown and can comment upon information that is central to
the outcome of their case – for example, the draft submission to be placed
before the Minister;[423] and
-
the Minister provide a statement of reasons for
an unfavourable decision on a first request for Ministerial intervention.[424]
4.43
The Select Committee considered that provision of a
statement of reasons would ensure fairness and allow applicants to identify in
any subsequent request matters that may have been overlooked. It would also
enable Parliament and the community to ascertain how the powers were being used.[425]
4.44
The Committee also recommended that the Immigration
Application Advice and Assistance Scheme (IAAAS) be extended to enable
applicants for Ministerial intervention to obtain an appropriate level of professional
legal assistance.[426]
The need for a tribunal decision as
a prerequisite for intervention
4.45
The Select Committee recommended that DIMIA consider
legislative changes to enable Ministerial intervention to be available in
certain circumstances where there is a compelling reason why a merits review
tribunal decision was not obtained. Witnesses and submitters to that inquiry –
including the Commonwealth Ombudsman – pointed to the problems of denying
access to Ministerial intervention in cases in which applicants, through no
fault of their own, were not able to appeal to a tribunal (ie, because an
invalid application for review had been lodged). The need to appeal to a
tribunal in cases where there is no chance of success before the tribunal, but
where there is a reasonable chance that the Minister might intervene, was also
queried.[427]
Financial hardship and delays in
obtaining bridging visas
4.46
The Select Committee identified a range of difficulties
being experienced by applicants. A particular concern was the evidence that
many applicants for Ministerial intervention faced considerable financial
hardship due to the constraints of bridging visas, particularly restrictions on
work rights (and therefore access to Medicare).
4.47
The committee recommended that all applicants for the
exercise of Ministerial discretion should be eligible for visas that attract
work rights, up to the time of the outcome of their first application. Children
who are seeking asylum should have access to social security and health care
throughout the processing period of any
applications for Ministerial discretion and all asylum seekers should have
access to health care at least until the outcome of a first application for Ministerial
discretion.[428]
4.48
The committee noted that applicants for Ministerial
intervention become eligible for a bridging visa while their request is being
considered. It
therefore recommended that
DIMIA formalise the application process for Ministerial intervention to
overcome delays and other problems in the process for granting bridging visas,
namely:
-
processing
times that can take up to several weeks;
-
applicants
not knowing when they should apply for a bridging visa; and
-
applicants
being ineligible for a bridging visa because an unsolicited letter or
inadequate case was presented to the Minister, often without the applicant’s
knowledge.[429]
4.49
This committee understands that the Government has yet
to respond to the Select Committee's report and recommendations.
The need for 'complementary protection'
4.50
An issue that arose in both of the above inquiries was
whether the Migration Act should be amended to provide expressly for
complementary protection.
4.51
The term 'complementary protection' refers to a
widening of the categories of persons who may be granted temporary or permanent
residence beyond only those who are owed refugee protection. The Refugees Convention
does not provide for protection of people who do not meet the Convention
definition of a refugee. However, a range of other international instruments
impose obligations not to return (or refoul)
persons who do not satisfy the Refugee Convention's definition
of a 'refugee', but who face a risk of a violation of their fundamental human
rights. Examples include the Convention Against Torture and Other Cruel,
Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment; the Convention on the Rights of
the Child; and the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights.
4.52
It is understood that there is no consistent
international approach on this issue, with the nature and application of
complementary protection provided under domestic law differing between countries.
The protection offered by countries can include permanent or temporary
residence on various grounds based on humanitarian concerns, obligations under
international human rights treaties, or judgement by a State as to whether it
is unsafe, inappropriate or not practicable to return to the country of origin.
International practice also varies markedly on the rights to be afforded under
complementary protections, ranging from nothing more than protection against refoulement to enjoyment of all rights
normally afforded to persons found to be a 'refugee'. Differences also exist in
the procedures followed to accord complementary protection.[430]
4.53
The committee notes that there are moves to harmonise
the various approaches to complementary protection, particularly within the
European Union.[431]
4.54
Australia's
practice has been to rely on the Ministerial discretionary powers to grant a
visa to meet the needs of those people in Australia
whose circumstances do not fit the criteria of the Refugees Convention. Another
mechanism has been the occasional creation of special categories of visas to
provide temporary haven for certain prescribed groups or to allow people in Australia
illegally to regularise their status.[432]
4.55
This practice was examined in both the above-mentioned
inquiries.
Concerns raised with the Committee
in 2000
4.56
A key issue in the committee's 2000 inquiry was the
fact that Australia's
treaty commitments – such as those under the CAT and the ICCPR – had not been
incorporated into Australian domestic law. Rather, as noted above these
obligations were met through the provision of the non-reviewable and
non-compellable Ministerial discretion in section 417 of the Migration Act. This led to committee consideration
of whether Australia
was complying with its obligation of non-refoulement under the CAT and the
ICCPR, and whether it was appropriate to rely on Ministerial discretion to give
effect to international obligations.
4.57
The report identified four specific areas of concern
regarding the use of Ministerial discretion powers to fulfil non-refoulement
obligations:
-
The absence of a formal mechanism for the
referral of cases to the Minister;
-
Reliance on a non reviewable and non-compellable
discretion is an unacceptable means for determining the fate of persons
claiming protection under Australia's international obligation;
-
The circumstances in which the Minister is able
to exercise the discretionary power is too narrow;[433] and
-
It takes too long to access the Ministerial
discretion.
4.58
A person seeking protection on humanitarian grounds must
make an application to the department for ‘refugee status’ based on the criteria
of the Refugee Convention, have that rejected and then seek to have that
negative decision reviewed by the RRT. This is required even though the
applicant and their advisor may consider such a claim for refugee status on
Convention grounds to be without merit. It is only after the Tribunal had
affirmed the department's decision that the applicant may apply to the Minister.[434]
4.59
The above, it was argued, had a number of unintended
adverse consequences:
-
it had added significantly to the number of
apparently ‘unsuccessful’ applications;
-
it fostered professional disrepute by forcing
practitioners to utilise the refugee determination process for the purpose of
seeking Ministerial discretion;
-
it wasted public monies by requiring the
assessment of humanitarian cases in the first instance against refugee criteria
– which will, by their very definition, fail;
-
it causes delays for alleged refugees who may be
emotionally vulnerable; and
-
applicants in immigration detention may be
detained for lengthy periods while waiting to access the Ministerial discretion.[435]
4.60
Notwithstanding the above, the committee's report
concluded that discretionary Ministerial powers – such as those provided by section
417 of the Act – were an appropriate means through which Australia
can meet its international obligations under the CAT, CROC and the ICCPR.[436]
4.61
However, it is clear that the Select Committee also
considered that discretionary Ministerial powers alone were an insufficient
safety net to ensure compliance with the above international obligations.[437] Further, the 2000 report noted that:
A revision of the process whereby a
person seeking asylum on humanitarian grounds is required to be processed
through an administrative decision-making system focussing on refugee related
grounds would remove the sometimes lengthy delays incurred in a number of
genuine cases. It should also lead to what would be considerable saving in time
and resources associated with unsuccessful RRT processing.[438]
4.62
Concerns that reliance on Ministerial discretions and
guidelines meant that applicants lacked enforceable rights and obligations led
the committee to recommend that the Government examine incorporation of the
non-refoulement obligations of the CAT and ICCPR into domestic law.[439]
4.63
This recommendation was generally rejected by the
Government.[440]
Concerns raised with the Select Committee
4.64
The same arguments and concerns arose during the Select
Committee's 2004 inquiry. The Select Committee received evidence expressing the
view that protection from refoulement should not be left solely to Ministerial
discretion powers which are non-compellable, non-reviewable and non-delegable
because:
-
Australia's non-refoulement obligations under
the CAT, CROC and ICCPR are not discretionary and subject to few, if any,
exceptions;[441]
-
CAT, CROC and ICCPR asylum seekers have no such
right of review and little protection in the way administrative decisions are
scrutinised; [442]and
-
reliance on the discretionary powers places
considerable burden on Australia's migration system and results in
non-Convention asylum seekers being detained for extended periods in order to request the Minister's intervention at the end of a
determination process which is not relevant to them. [443]
4.65
In light of the above, it was put to the Select Committee
that providing alternative administrative arrangements to enable Australia
to fulfil its non-refoulement would ease the burden on the current (over) use
of Ministerial discretion. Introduction of complementary protection under the
Migration Act, it was suggested, had the potential to enable Australia's
migration and humanitarian programs to be delivered with certainty and transparency,
and to assist non-Refugee Convention asylum seekers who are in genuine need of
humanitarian protection.[444]
4.66
The Select Committee – in its majority report –
accepted these arguments. It was concerned that Australia
is one of the few countries in the developed world that does not have a system
of complementary protection. The Select Committee was in no doubt that the
current Australian practice of relying solely on Ministerial discretion places
it at odds with emerging international trends. In its view, the concept has not
received the attention from Government it now clearly deserves.[445]
4.67
However, as complementary protection was at that time a
relatively undeveloped concept in Australian domestic law, the Committee
considered that further examination of how complementary protection might work
in the Australia
context was warranted. It therefore recommended that the Government consider
adoption of a system of complementary protection to ensure that Australia
no longer relies solely on the Minister's discretionary powers to meet its
non-refoulement obligations under the CAT, CROC and ICCPR.[446]
4.68
In making this recommendation, the Select Committee
dismissed concerns raised by DIMIA that introduction of complementary
protection would encourage litigation and create the potential for misuse of
the process by those wishing to prolong their stay and frustrate their removal
from Australia.
4.69
The Government has yet to respond formally to the Select
Committee's report. However, it is apparent from the evidence given to this
inquiry that it does not accept the Select Committee's findings and maintains
that the existing arrangements are appropriate.
Concerns raised during this inquiry
4.70
The same concerns and criticisms that were levelled at
the operation of the discretionary Ministerial powers and at the lack of a
system of complementary protection were put to the Committee during this
inquiry.
4.71
Most submissions and witnesses agreed that there is a
need for Ministerial discretion in relation to migration matters, as a 'catch-all'
or a final 'safety net'. However, several expressed concern in the manner it
which it operates. These concerns included:
-
the non-compellable, non-delegable and
non-reviewable nature of the power;
-
the lack of accountability and transparency in
decision making;
-
the delay in obtaining a decision can prolong a
person's detention; and
-
reliance on such a power is at odds with
Australia's international commitments under international treaties.
4.72
Submissions and witnesses also argued that, rather than
relying on Ministerial discretion to cover cases where an asylum seeker does
not fall within the definition of refugee in the Refugee Convention, but may be
eligible for protection under other conventions such as CAT, ICCPR and CROC, a fairer
and more efficient process would be to consider such claims under some form of
complementary protection, such as a humanitarian visa.[447]
4.73
These concerns and criticisms are examined below.
The non-compellable, non-delegable
and non-reviewable nature of the power
4.74
Most submissions and witnesses did not agree with the Committee's
finding in 2000 that the continued reliance on the current system of Ministerial
discretion was appropriate.[448]
4.75
The Law Society of South Australia (LSSA), for example,
considered the present reliance on Ministerial discretion is 'inherently
unsuitable' in dealing with Australia's
obligation on non-refoulement, which 'is not discretionary'. It pointed to:
... an inherent conflict in attempting to meet the non-refoulement
obligation through reliance on a non-compellable, non-reviewable, non-delegable
decision made on the sole basis of intervention where it is “in the public
interest”. There should be a clear legislative structure to guide the decision-making
process to ensure factors relevant to Australia’s
obligations under the ICCPR, CROC and CAT
are considered and that outcomes are fair and consistent. The current system
does not provide an 'effective remedy' sufficient to satisfy the requirements
of international law.[449]
4.76
The LSSA also argued that with any administrative
decision there is a risk of errors occurring, whether it is as a result of 'incorrect information, a lack of
relevant information, or a misinterpretation of the facts or the law.'[450] It stressed that:
This risk is heightened where applications are made to the Minister
without legal advice as to what information is in fact relevant, where there is
no opportunity to respond to adverse material which may be before the Minister,
where applications are made on the basis of documentary evidence alone and/or
where the Minister is burdened by such a large volume of applications that
insufficient time is available to consider each individual application
thoroughly.[451]
4.77
Yet, notwithstanding these risks, the LSSA noted that:
... the decision as to whether or not to exercise Ministerial
discretion ...[which is] in effect a primary decision where an applicant is
seeking complementary protection ... is not subject to any form of review and
provides no safeguard against potential harm flowing from an error in the
decision.[452]
4.78
The National Council of Churches Australia (NCCA) shared
this concern. It argued that:
There is no reason in principle why a person applying under
ICCPR/CRC/CAT grounds should be entitled to a lesser form of support (income
support, work rights and Medicare coverage) than an asylum seeker applying
under the Refugee Convention. Each invokes Australia’s
obligations under the various treaties and Australia’s
non-refoulement obligations under the ICCPR, CRC and CAT are no less important
than those under the Refugees’ Convention. The potential harm resulting from a
flawed decision is equally severe, if not fatal.[453]
Lack of transparency and accountability
in decision making
4.79
Witnesses and submitters pointed to a lack of accountability
and transparency in how the Ministerial discretion was being exercised.
4.80
Representatives of the LSSA commented that:
By its very nature, the exercise of Ministerial discretion lacks
transparency and accountability. It may result in inconsistent outcomes because
of the vagueness of the criteria which must be established in order for the Minister
to intervene. It is open to allegations of actual or apprehended bias and
corruption.[454]
4.81
Amnesty International echoed the Law Society's
concerns. Its representative, Dr Graham
Thom,
advised the Committee that:
There are issues regarding transparency and guidelines. For
those people who have to try to navigate the guidelines in terms of getting 417
applications or 48B applications to the Minister, at times it just does not
seem to make sense. You may tick off every box on those guidelines and you get
a letter back saying that you have not met the guidelines. You do not
understand. The inability to challenge the decision is increasingly frustrating
for practitioners, let alone for asylum seekers.[455]
4.82
The LSSA suggested that such shortcomings could be
overcome if reasons for decisions were tabled in Parliament (as they were
previously) and if written reasons were provided to the applicant where the Minister
declines to exercise his or her discretion.[456]
As noted above, earlier Senate inquiries have made a similar recommendation.
4.83
Uniting Justice Australia (UJA) and Asylum Seeker
Project Hotham Mission (ASPHM) also stressed the importance of ensuring that
asylum seekers understand why their application has been refused :
... It is important that asylum seekers have all the information
as to why they have been refused. Allowing asylum seekers to feel that their
entire case has been heard and that a definitive decision looking at all our
obligations has been made will assist and facilitate a more humane process of
return. All persons requesting
or referred for Ministerial intervention on their visa application should
receive notice, in writing, of the decision made by the Minister and the reason
for the decision.[457]
4.84
Reverend Poulos
of Uniting Justice Australia
advised the Committee that 'we never know why people are accepted or refused'.
She also highlighted the problems facing those trying to advise applicants:
Without any understanding of how 417 decisions are made, it
leaves people with absolutely no grounds to assess things and think: ‘Of the
conditions surrounding this particular case, what is the most relevant? What is
the Minister going to consider in particular? What would be helpful for the Minister
in this case? What is irrelevant?’ It is a bit of lottery for people.[458]
4.85
Ms Lucy
Bowring of the ASPHM expressed the same concern
over the lack of transparency:
We cannot say why decisions are being made or not being made. It
is very hard to determine if a certain issue is being picked up on. I know
there have been a few occasions when we have had two very similar cases before
the Minister and one family received the visa and the other did not. It is very
difficult to determine why that might be when you do not know what has actually
been looked at and considered.[459]
4.86
When asked how they dealt with such a situation and
what avenues are open to them to resolve such a situation, Ms
Bowring responded:
We do not have an avenue, apart from trying to talk to the
department about putting up the case again, stressing our original concerns and
perhaps our concerns around other cases that received a positive decision in a
similar situation. With that level of advocacy, sometimes the case will get up
again and the Minister will decide to consider it. Whether the Minister ends up
making a decision or not is unclear, but that is pretty much the role that we
take. It is very arbitrary and it is very unclear.[460]
4.87
The Migration Institute of Australia (MIA) advised the Committee
that, despite the 'recent and comprehensive Senate inquiry in 2004', the use of
the Minister's discretionary powers 'remained a process shrouded in mystery and
controversy':
Recent decisions relating to Ministerial Discretion (in
particular decisions which have separated parents from their natural children),
have left MIA perplexed, given the public
interest foundations behind these powers. It appears to MIA
members that they can no longer rely on MSI guidelines written under the
provisions of these sections of the Act as reliable for properly and
professionally advising and acting for applicants in these circumstances.[461]
4.88
The MIA agreed that Ministerial
discretion in migration matters should be retained as a necessary and basic Ministerial
power. However, it also considered that:
... the very seriousness of the situation facing the majority of
people seeking the Minister’s intervention to grant visas in the public
interest ..., requires absolute trust in the government of the day that such a
power is at the very least not politicised or even suggested as so.[462]
4.89
In light of the above, the MIA
queried why the above-mentioned recommendations made by the Select Committee had
not been decided on or acted upon by the Government. The MIA
also recommended that the Migration Act be amended to allow the power to be
delegated by the Minister to decision makers at State Director level, as is the
case with other powers under the Act. In its view, this would go some way in de-politicising
the intervention powers and providing more consistency overall.[463]
Delays prolong detention and
hardship
4.90
A major concern raised in evidence to the Committee was
the length of time involved in seeking the exercise of Ministerial discretion. Submissions
pointed out that applications for Ministerial intervention are lodged late in
the assessment process, after an applicant has already gone through and had to
await the outcome of the initial assessment by DIMIA and then review by the
RRT. The Asylum Seekers Centre advised that, while the Centre had been given
the opportunity through the Ministerial unit in DIMIA to request that a
particular case be expedited on the basis of mental health concerns, they had:
... several clients at the moment who have lodged a section 417
(application) and been waiting for over two years – in some cases, close to
three years – without word. During that time, they are living in complete
limbo. They have absolutely no way of knowing whether their claims are even
going to be considered.[464]
4.91
Criticism was directed at the Migration Act's failure
to provide for requests for protection on humanitarian grounds to be undertaken
at the primary stage of application. As NCCA representatives noted:
... protection visa applicants with grounds for complementary
protection must apply as a refugee to DIMIA and appeal to the RRT and receive
negative decisions from both before they can appeal to the Minister on
complementary protection grounds. In the case of protection visa applicants in
detention, this effectively prolongs the detention as they must first be
considered under irrelevant criteria by DIMIA and the RRT before being able
appeal under relevant criteria to the Minister.[465]
4.92
Witnesses also pointed to the impact on applicants
living in the community. Applicants for protection on humanitarian grounds living
in the community may face financial and other hardships pending Ministerial
consideration of their application. Different levels of support are available
apply depending on the basis of their release (such as release into the
community under a temporary protection visa, a bridging visa E, removal pending
bridging visa, or under community detention arrangements). This has prompted
church representatives to describe the plight of some applicants in the
following terms:
The absence of complementary protection also affects asylum
seekers living in the community. These are people who entered Australia
with a visa and then claimed asylum so they are not detained. Some have work
rights and income support and others have neither and are totally dependent on
charities. Again, they have to wait and get knocked back by both the Department
of Immigration and the Refugee Review Tribunal before they can apply to the Minister
under the appropriate grounds. For those who are not permitted to work or
receive income support, this obviously greatly extends the period in which they
are impoverished, idle and forced to depend on charity. For those with income
support who are forced to apply as a refugee to the Department of Immigration,
get knocked back, and appeal to the Refugee Review Tribunal, and get knocked
back, it is a waste of government-funded income support and processing costs,
as they’re not being assessed under the right criteria until they apply to the Minister.
And when they do apply to the Minister under the right criteria, their income
support is cut off and often their work rights, leaving them without income,
work or Medicare. [466]
4.93
The committee also notes evidence cited in Chapter 8 of
this report of the adverse impacts that prolonged uncertainty can have on the
mental and emotional well being of some applicants.
4.94
The Regugee Advocacy Service of South Australia (RASSA)
provided the Committee with an example of the delay and hardship caused by the Minister’s
policy of not considering section 417 requests while court proceedings are current.
As mentioned above, the Guidelines provide that such cases are 'inappropriate
for consideration'. The example concerned a group of Sabean Mandeans who had
claimed protection from persecution in Iran
and Iraq:
On 20 June 2004,
all Sabean Mandeans that we know of were granted protection visas except for
those who had court proceedings on foot. ... The remaining Sabean Mandeans were
required to put their lives on hold while they waited for years for the court
process to be completed, despite the logical outcome being a guaranteed visa.
These asylum seekers were faced with the cruel choice of giving up their only
available legal fight for asylum to rely on a non-compellable, discretionary
decision from a Ministry that is known for being inconsistent or waiting out a
lengthy court process in order to obtain the asylum that we all knew they
deserved. It is now two years since the RRT clearly acknowledged that Sabean
Mandeans are persecuted in Iran
and Iraq and we
know of one Sabean Mandean who still has not received a protection visa due to
court proceedings continuing well into 2005. This is not only an appalling way
to treat genuine asylum seekers but also an extraordinary waste of
administrative and judicial resources. DIMIA cannot dismiss this criticism
merely by pretending to defer to the authority of the courts because the Minister
has intervened with the granting of a section 417 visa or a section 48B
opportunity while court proceedings were on foot; just not at RASSA’s request.[467]
4.95
RASSA
argued that, rather than delaying matters, the Minister and her Department
should take action to grant a visa as soon as they are satisfied that an
asylum seeker is deserving of protection.
International humanitarian
obligations – Complementary Protection
4.96
Most submissions and witnesses did not agree with the committee's
finding in 2000 that Australia
is able to meet its international obligations under CAT, ICCPR and CROC by
relying on discretionary Ministerial powers. They considered that these
obligations could only be met appropriately by the creation of a complementary
protection visa to cover the particular circumstances of asylum seekers whose
claim for protection is based on these conventions.
4.97
Some highlighted the lack of accountability and
transparency in the current system to argue that it was an unacceptable mechanism
for determining the fate of persons claiming protection under international
obligations. The UJA and ASPHM, for example, advised:
For those seeking Ministerial intervention for humanitarian
reasons, there is no formal decision made on a person’s humanitarian status.
The question of whether claims with humanitarian merit are adequately assessed
is crucial. The current process does not give any assurance that this occurs,
in part due to the non-compellable nature of the power, combined with a lack of
binding criteria in relation to international obligations against which Ministerial
decisions can be measured and held accountable. If Ministerial intervention
continues to be used to assess cases that may invoke our obligations under
international treaties, there is a need for mechanisms to ensure a consistent
application of the guidelines, and the guidelines themselves must be expanded
to clearly and adequately detail Australia’s
humanitarian, protection, and non-refoulement obligations under these treaties.
Applicants also need to be enabled to explicitly outline their case for
humanitarian protection against these guidelines as the claim made against
criteria for refugee protection may not be adequate and can not be assumed to
contain sufficient relevant information to assess a non-refugee convention
claim.[468]
4.98
Others pointed to the inefficiencies inherent in the
current system, which requires asylum seekers to first seek protection under
the Refugee Convention and then exhaust all avenues of appeal.[469] The LSSA, for example, considered
the existing procedures involved in requesting the exercise of Ministerial
discretion to be an illogical and inefficient use of resources. It said:
The burden of the large number of applications to the Minister
in recent years is unacceptable and unsustainable, yet the discretionary power
will continue to be relied upon whilst there remains no effective structure
provided for in the Migration Act for the consideration of applications for
complementary protection. As applicants must have exhausted all avenues of appeal
before seeking the Minister’s intervention, frivolous applications for review
by the RRT and Federal Court are implicitly encouraged. This is a ridiculous
and costly waste of time and resources.[470]
4.99
The LSSA stressed that:
[t]he current system is flawed as ... neither the primary decision
maker within DIMIA nor any of the review bodies are entitled to consider
factors relevant to complementary protection due to the legislative constraints
of the Migration Act. [471]
4.100
Others emphasised the impact on those who seek Australia's
protection on humanitarian grounds. Amnesty International's representatives,
for example, advised the Committee that:
... we have seen a number of cases where we believe individuals
should have been picked up much earlier in the system. In some cases those
individuals have had to go through years of very traumatic circumstances in
trying to prove who they are and that they would suffer persecution. .... where
there are issues of human rights, there needs to be a system that operates
before it gets to the Minister. Again, this is where we raise the issue of
complementary protection, because if assessments are able to be made before
they get to the Minister then you will cut back on a great deal of suffering.[472]
4.101
The Refugee Council of Australia recently summed up the
situation as follows:
By leaving any consideration of non-Convention [that is, Refugee
Convention] related protection claims to the very end of the process and by
consigning the decision to Ministerial discretion, it can be argued that Australia's
current practice is inefficient, unnecessarily expensive, places an unrealistic
burden on the Minister for Immigration, lacks transparency and accountability,
does not contain sufficient safeguards and is detrimental to both Convention
refugees (by clogging up the system) and to those with non-Convention needs.[473]
Calls for reform
4.102
In order to address the deficiencies identified above
and to ensure that Australian practice is consistent with both Australia's
international obligations and with international best practice, witness and
submitters argued that changes had to be made to the manner in which Australia
considers protection applications.
4.103
Most argued for a system of complementary protection
based on a single administrative procedure in which consideration of both
Refugee Convention and non-Convention related protection claims was undertaken
by primary decision-makers.
4.104
The committee notes in particular the model of
complementary protection detailed in the paper prepared by the Refugee Council,
Amnesty International and the National Council of Churches in Australia
entitled Complementary Protection: The
Way Ahead. The aim of the model –
which has also been endorsed by most Australian churches, the ICJ and other
legal organisations as well as refugee organisations – is to ensure that
Australian practice is 'fair, transparent, timely, efficient and legally
defensible'.[474]
4.105
The proposed model would allow 'an applicant's
eligibility for complementary protection to be assessed at each stage of the
determination process, thereby ensuring that those entitled to protection
receive it at the earliest possible time. Complementary protection would be
offered to people who would face 'a substantial violation of their human rights
if returned to their country of origin'. This could include people who:
-
have no nationality or right of residence
elsewhere;
-
would face torture if returned to their country
of origin;
-
come from countries where their lives, safety or
freedom is likely to be threatened by the indiscriminate effects of generalised
violence, foreign aggression or internal conflict;
-
come from countries where there is significant
and systemic violation of human rights and/or a breakdown in the rule of law;
and
-
would face serious human rights violations if
compelled to return.[475]
4.106
The introduction of this model would require an
amendment to paragraph 36(2)(b) of the Migration Act to include a new section
which would set out the criteria for the grant of a visa, introduce a new visa
subclass, set out any necessary limitations, and stipulate that nothing in this
section removes or otherwise affects the exercise of the Minister's discretion.
It would also require a new regulation to set out the framework for the grant
of a visa on the grounds of the need for complementary protection and the
rights and entitlements afforded to successful applicants.[476]
4.107
It was argued that adoption of this model would have
the following benefits:
-
bring Australia into line with international
best practice;[477]
-
ensure compliance with Australia's international
obligations and commitments;
-
result in consistency between Australian policy
with respect to onshore and offshore refugees;[478]
-
result in significant cost savings for
determination bodies and also reduce welfare payments to asylum seekers as well
as detention costs;[479]
-
enhance the efficiency and productivity of DIMIA
and the RRT;
-
make it easier for applicants to present their
claims by reducing the perceived need for tenuous links between their fear of
return and Refugee Convention grounds;
-
ensure necessary transparency, accountability
and consistency in decision-making;
-
reduce the burden on the Minister for
Immigration and enable the Minister's discretionary powers to used for the
exceptional cases for which they were intended;
-
ensure that those entitled to Australia's
protection receive it in a timely fashion and thereby enhance their ability to
become productive members of the Australian community;
-
enable detained asylum seekers to have all
relevant claims considered simultaneously and thereby reduce the duration and
trauma of detention;
-
benefit Convention refugees by feeing up the
determination processes;
-
benefit TPV holders by enabling a more thorough
examination of the implications of changed country circumstances when
applications for a further TPV are being considered; and
-
reduce the incentive for people to abuse the
protection application process to extend their stay in the country as decisions
will be made faster.[480]
4.108
This view was shared by other witness and submitters,
such as the LSSA. It considered that such:
... reform would have numerous benefits including ensuring
Australia meets the full extent of its human rights obligations, reducing the
burden on the Minister, DIMIA and review bodies through the use of a more
efficient determination process, reducing the length of time asylum seekers
spend in detention, and affording applicants a more acceptable level of due
process and the safety net of a reviewable decision.[481]
3.1
The committee was advised that the Uniting
Church also supported the move to a
system of complementary protection:
... which would cover the assessment of cases which might trigger
our obligations to protect under international treaties other than the refugee
convention. These are predictable claims, not obscure and exceptional claims as
would be appropriate for consideration under the powers of Ministerial
discretion.[482]
4.109
The LSSA recommended the retention of Ministerial
discretion 'as a mechanism for use in exceptional cases'. However, the LSSA
considered that, unlike the present process which requires all avenues of
appeal be completed before a request can be made, a request for Ministerial
discretion should be permitted at any time during the assessment and
determination process.[483]
4.110
It was put to the Committee that adoption of the above-mentioned
complementary protection model would not prompt a flood of applications as it
is merely a transfer of existing decision making power from the Minister to
officials. Moreover, vexatious or frivolous applications can be prevented by
codification of the relevant criteria and by incorporating appropriate
safeguards.[484]
4.111
The committee notes that successive Governments have
not supported the introduction of a system of complementary protection. DIMIA, maintains
that current Australian arrangements are adequate. It said:
... provide a range of mechanisms to provide continued lawful stay
in Australia on
general humanitarian grounds with considerable flexibility to respond appropriately to individual circumstances. It is not
possible to anticipate and codify all human circumstances. Accordingly, the Ministerial
intervention power plays a significant additional role in providing the
capacity to flexibly and compassionately respond to other exceptional
individual circumstances where there are public interest grounds in providing
some form of continued stay in Australia. At the same time the migration
framework allows the Government to develop regulations as necessary tailored to
the particular circumstances of new groups as the need arises.[485]
4.112
DIMIA also highlighted the potential cost of moving
towards a complementary protection regime:
It is not clear why it is expected that the introduction of some
form of complementary protection in Australia
would deliver cost savings. A parallel visa system for complementary protection
with full merits and judicial review available and with broad eligibility
criteria, is likely to attract a wider class of applicant and therefore larger
numbers of applicants, most of whom may not be
eligible, with corresponding increased costs.[486]
4.113
DIMIA advised that it has not conducted any studies
into the feasibility of introducing a system of complementary protection. Nor
has it done any assessment of whether the introduction of a complementary
protection process would reduce the amount of immigration litigation that DIMIA
was involved in.[487]
4.114
The lack of evidence that there are significant numbers
of persons entitled to CAT, ICCPR or CROC protection who do not also meet the Refugee
Convention definition of a refugee has also been cited as reason for
maintaining the status quo.[488]
4.115
DIMIA's response to concerns over the nature of the Ministerial
powers and the lack of accountability and transparency was to note the
exceptional nature of the powers:
The section 417 intervention power enables the Minister to act
in exceptional circumstances to grant a visa, in the public interest, to a
person who does not meet the normal legislative requirements for a visa grant,
including after testing the initial decision at review. Migration legislation
sets out the requirements for the Minister to report to Parliament on the use
of her power.[489]
4.116
In response to concerns over the delays and
uncertainties experienced by applicants, DIMIA maintained that, given the
exceptional nature of the power, it was unreasonable for applicants to expect
that the Minister will necessarily use her intervention power in their case.[490]
Committee view
4.117
The committee notes that the issues in relation to the
Minister's discretion have been identified in a number of inquiries as
deserving of serious review. The most
comprehensive of these inquiries was conducted by the Senate Select Committee
on Ministerial Discretion in Migration Matters, which tabled its report in
March 2004. The committee generally supports the recommendations made in that
report.[491]
4.118
However, to date the Government has chosen to ignore
the recommendations made by these inquiries.
4.119
If at the end of the day the Government intends to
honour Australia's
obligations under international treaties and conventions such as CAT, CROC, and
ICCPR, then it would make sense to provide for it upfront, rather than giving
that responsibility to the Minister involved. Having said that, the committee understands
that a minimum level of ministerial discretion is necessary to give the system a
required degree of flexibility.
4.120
The committee considers that in a system based on the
rule of law, in general, it is inappropriate that rights are discretionary,
although it acknowledges that a sensible balance is required. In recent years that balance has swung too
far towards Ministerial discretion. It believes that the recommendations made
below will go a long way to achieving that better balance.
4.121
The Committee makes the following five specific
recommendations:[492]
Recommendation 29
4.122
The committee recommends that coverage of the
Immigration Application Advice and Assistance (IAAAS) scheme be extended to
enable applicants for Ministerial intervention to obtain an appropriate level of
professional legal assistance.
Recommendation 30
4.123
The committee recommends that each applicant for Ministerial
intervention be shown a draft of any submission to be placed before the Minister
to enable the applicant to comment on the information contained in the
submission. This consultative process should be carried out within a tight but
reasonable time frame to avoid any unnecessary delay.
Recommendation 31
4.124
The committee recommends that all applicants for the exercise
of Ministerial discretion should be eligible for visas that attract work
rights, up to the time of the outcome of their first application. Children who are
seeking asylum should have access to social security and health care throughout
the processing period of any applications for Ministerial discretion and all
asylum seekers should have access to health care at least until the outcome of
a first application for Ministerial discretion.
Recommendation 32
4.125
The committee recommends that the Minister ensure all
statements tabled in Parliament under sections 351 and 417 (which grant the
Minister the discretionary power to substitute more favourable decisions from
that of the Tribunals) provide sufficient information to allow Parliament to
scrutinise the use of the powers. This should include the Minister's reasons
for believing intervention in a given case to be in the public interest as
required by the legislation. Statements should also include an indication of
how the case was brought to the Minister's attention by an approach from the
visa applicant, by a representative on behalf of the visa applicant, on the
suggestion of a tribunal, at the initiative of an officer of the department or
in some other way.
Recommendation 33
4.126
The committee recommends that the Migration Act be
amended to introduce a system of 'complementary
protection' for future asylum seekers who do not meet the definition of refugee
under the Refugee Convention but otherwise need protection for humanitarian
reasons and cannot be returned. Consideration of claims under the Refugee
Convention and Australia's other international human rights obligations
should take place at the same time. A separate humanitarian stream
should be established to process applicants whose claims are in this category,
including a review process.
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